BBC
North Korea is not responding to attempts to negotiate the release of a US soldier who fled over its heavily-armed border, Washington says.
Private Travis King crossed the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) dividing North and South Korea on Tuesday.
The Pentagon had contacted North Korea, a state department spokesman said. "My understanding is those communications have not yet been answered."
There has been no word from the North on PV2 King's whereabouts or his fate.
The crisis comes during a particularly tense time with the North. Relations with the US have plummeted in recent years, as it has tested dozens of increasingly powerful missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
On its travel advisory, the US tells its citizens not to travel to North Korea - one of the world's most isolated states - due to "the continuing serious risk of arrest" and the "critical threat of wrongful detention".
It is unclear if PV2 King has defected or hopes to return.
Experts say such a low-ranking soldier would have little propaganda and intelligence value, which may prompt North Korea into releasing him - but what will happen to him remains highly uncertain.
The lack of precedent makes it hard to foresee next steps - it's been decades since a US soldier last defected to the North.
The fact that Pyongyang is not responding to US attempts to communicate is adding to the uncertainty.
PV2 King was due to fly back to the US from South Korea, where he was based, to face disciplinary action.
But the 23-year-old did not board the plane when he parted ways with his military escorts at Incheon Airport near Seoul on Tuesday and instead embarked on an apparently pre-booked tour to the border - the details of how he managed to do that are still unclear.
US defence officials said the soldier "wilfully" crossed into the North over one of the most heavily-fortified areas in the world.
The DMZ has separated the two countries since the Korean War in the 1950s, in which the US backed the South. The war ended with an armistice, meaning that the two sides are still technically at war. Tens of thousands of US troops remain in the South.
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