Crispee again declines to address what his position would be if these were his own family members, but I will desist in embarrassing him and his untenable position further... for now.
Story Highlights
There was no shortage of envoys ready to travel to negotiate women's release
Bill Clinton and John Kerry were only two envoys officially invited by North Korea
Clinton visit gives North Korea a level of respect it craves but rarely gets, writer says
Unclear if visit will bring North Korea back to the table on the nuclear issue
Former President Clinton's trip to North Korea was the culmination of weeks of quiet diplomacy with Pyongyang and subtle public statements aimed at freeing American journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee.
Former President Clinton arrives to a warm welcome in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Tuesday.
Having secured the journalists' release, will the trip eventually coax North Korea back to the negotiating table?
There was no shortage of envoys ready to travel to North Korea and negotiate the women's release.
Some heavyweights were turned down by the North Koreans: former Vice President Al Gore, a co-founder of the media outfit the women were working for when they were arrested, and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations whose previous missions to North Korea included negotiating the release of a detained American.
Lower-level envoys like former U.S. ambassador to South Korea and current Korea Society Chairman Donald Gregg, Sig Harrison, an expert on North Korean nukes who has traveled there several times, and Han Park, a scholar at the University of Georgia, all offered their services.
Sen. John Kerry, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was also closely involved in coordinating efforts with the White House and State Department to free the women. According to sources intimately involved with the efforts, Kerry received an official invitation to visit Pyongyang to facilitate their release and open a larger dialogue on the nuclear issue after several weeks of quiet direct diplomacy between Kerry and his aides and North Korea.
Meanwhile, Washington and Pyongyang were sending signals that the time was ripe for such a mission.
more
www.cnn.com