"Sanctions efforts in general were explicitly discussed" in talks between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi, the senior State Department official said.
"Notwithstanding any sweet sounding comments that foreign diplomats may think they've heard from the North Koreans, the troubling behavior by North Korea continues," the official told reporters at a briefing in New York.
And he stressed "North Korea's efforts to acquire a nuclear missile capability continue" despite a rigorous international sanctions regime.
Regional analysts and experts warned yesterday that North Korea's nuclear weapons programme is developing beyond the international community's ability to rein it in with effective sanctions and export restrictions.
Even as Pyongyang's closest ally China announced an export ban to the North of technologies and goods with dual-use potential, experts questioned whether North Korea's weapons programme hadn't already moved beyond its earlier dependence on external equipment and know-how.
"They are not at the start of this process anymore. They've been at it a long time," said Park Jiyoung, director of the Asan Institute's Science and Technology Policy Center.
North Korea has carried out three nuclear tests -- the last, and most powerful, in February this year, and six-party talks aimed at persuading Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear programme have stalled.
"Both leaders agreed that it is important for us to coordinate closely to signal to North Korea that it has no alternative but to denuclearize," the US official said.
"And the Chinese decision to impose restrictions on what goes in and what comes out of North Korea, I think, is clearly indicative of their level of concern."
But the State Department official would not be drawn into either denying or confirming the reports.
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