SEOUL, South  Korea     (AP) -- Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter said Thursday that  North Korean leader Kim Jong Il wants direct talks with South Korea's  leader - an offer unlikely to be accepted until Pyongyang takes  responsibility for violence that killed 50 South Koreans last year.
A  summit would be a major step toward smoothing over animosity fueled by  the bloodshed, and a personal call from Kim is notable, though North  Korea regularly pushes for the resumption of aid-for-nuclear-disarmament  talks. It generally wants to return to the negotiating table without  preconditions, however.
South Korean President  Lee Myung-bak has also floated the possibility of one-on-one talks with  Kim - but only if the North takes responsibility for the sinking of a  South Korean warship blamed on Pyongyang and an artillery attack on a  South Korean island.
Carter told reporters  hours after he returned from the North that he and three former European  leaders didn't have a hoped-for meeting with Kim during their three-day  trip.
But he said that Kim sent them a  written personal message as they were leaving, saying he's prepared for a  summit meeting with the South Korean president at any time. Carter said  North Korean officials expressed deep regret for the deaths on the  South Korean warship Cheonan and for the civilians killed in the island  shelling.
He added, however, that it was clear  that "they will not publicly apologize and admit culpability for the  Cheonan incident." North Korea denies sinking the ship, despite a South  Korea-led international investigation that blamed the country. It says  it was provoked into the island shelling by South Korean live fire  drills.
Carter is well-respected in North  Korea for his role in helping work out a 1994 nuclear deal that may have  averted a war. But officials in Seoul and Washington have put little  stock in his ability to engineer a breakthrough this time in nuclear  talks.
It has been more than two years since  nuclear negotiators from the United States and neighboring nations last  met with the North in an effort to persuade it to abandon its atomic  weapons programs.
Since then, the North has  conducted missile and nuclear tests and proudly unveiled a new nuclear  facility that could give it another way to make atomic bombs.
The  United States says it won't push forward on nuclear talks until South  Korea is satisfied that the North has taken responsibility for last  year's violence.
Carter said the goal of his  visit is to contribute to greater understanding between North Korea and  the outside world, but that it's up to officials to make real progress.
The  former American president, former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari,  former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Brundtland and former Irish  President Mary Robinson met with the North's foreign minister and the  president of the country's parliament.
When  asked why he thought Kim Jong Il did not meet with the group, Carter  noted that the South's president did not grant their request for a  meeting either.
"We don't question the decision of a head of state about the priorities they set for their own schedule," Carter said.
Carter  didn't address the case of Jun Young Su, a Korean-American being held  in North Korea, reportedly on charges of carrying out missionary  activity. He had said earlier he would not raise the case, though the  former president flew to North Korea last year to free another American  jailed in Pyongyang.
Carter started Thursday's  news conference by offering condolences for those killed in last year's  attacks, an apparent nod to criticism that he had glossed over the  deaths in past dealings with the North.
But he also likely angered many in Seoul and Washington by criticizing their food aid policies.
Carter  said that for the United States and South Korea "to deliberately  withhold food aid to the North Korean people because of political or  military issues not related is really indeed a human rights violation."
South  Korea links aid resumption to progress in ties with North Korea. It  says better ties largely depend on Pyongyang taking responsibility for  past attacks.
Washington says it's still  considering North Korean requests for food, which officials say are  evaluated on the basis of need, resources availability and the ability  to monitor food distribution.
Years of poor  harvests, a lack of investment in agriculture and political isolation  have left the North severely vulnerable to starvation.
Former  Irish President Robinson said many in the North need help now. She said  the country is facing a "matter of utter life and death urgency."
 
 
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