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  • North Korea To Quit Nuclear Arms Program!

    N. Korea Vows to Quit Arms Program
    Nuclear Agreement Set at 6-Nation Talks

    By Edward Cody
    Washington Post Foreign Service
    Monday, September 19, 2005; A01



    BEIJING, Sept. 19 -- China announced Monday that negotiators from six nations have reached agreement under which North Korea pledged to dismantle its nuclear arms program in return for recognition and aid from the United States and its Asian allies.

    Although it included only general terms, the accord marked the first specific agreement since the six-party negotiations opened under Chinese sponsorship in August 2003. It was designed to serve as the basis for further talks on the timing of the taking down of North Korea's nuclear weapons program and the corresponding provision of economic aid and diplomatic relations and other inducements for the government of Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang.

    Although only preliminary, the agreement was a triumph for China, which has undertaken to host and referee the talks on a major Asian security problem. The mission has been a new exercise in leadership for China, emerging as a regional leader after years of standing on the sidelines and preaching non-interference in other countries' affairs.

    The agreement came on the seventh day of the current round of negotiations, which had been deadlocked and appeared headed into another standoff.

    The agreement was reached on the basis of a compromise proposal put forward by China in an effort to bridge differences between the United States and Pyongyang over a North Korean demand for a light-water nuclear reactor to produce electricity. The compromise suggested that North Korea be accorded the right in principle to peaceful nuclear energy, but only after dismantling its nuclear weapons program and rejoining the U.N. nuclear inspection regime and the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

    The Chinese foreign minister, Li Zhaoxing, had spoken by telephone Sunday night with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the official New China News Agency reported, in what was believed to be an effort to solicit U.S. flexibility. Rice also conferred with other foreign ministers of the six nations represented here, according to Christopher Hill, assistant secretary of state for East Asia and the Pacific and the chief U.S. negotiator.

    The Chinese compromise proposal was introduced Friday, the fourth day of this round of talks, after it became apparent that North Korea would not accept an earlier draft agreement that contained no mention of its demand for a light-water reactor to produce electricity as part of any accord on abandoning its nuclear weapons program. Diplomats said the new draft offered North Korea the right in principle to use nuclear energy to produce electricity in the future, after it had dismantled its nuclear weapons program and rejoined the international nuclear inspection regime.

    The agreement was announced in a statement issued by the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

    "The DPRK stated that it has the right to peaceful uses of nuclear energy," the statement said, using the initials for North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. "The other parties expressed their respect and agreed to discuss at an appropriate time the subject of the provision of a light-water reactor to the DPRK."

    Those terms represented a concession by the United States, which has insisted since talks resumed last Tuesday that North Korea could request an electricity production reactor only after fulfilling all other commitments in the agreement, including the dismantlement of its nuclear arms program and readmitting U.N. inspections to the country.

    The Chinese announcement did not make clear the terms under which this dispute was settled or set aside.

    "The DPRK committed abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs and returning at an early date to the treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons (NPT) and to IAEA safeguards," the statement said, referring to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency.

    The accord under negotiation was designed as a statement of principles for a nuclear-free Korean Peninsula, a goal all six nations say they are committed to. It was to serve as a basis for more detailed talks in the future.

    Before the agreement was announced among China, the United States, North and South Korea, Japan and Russia, two of them, South Korea and Russia, had signaled approval of the Chinese compromise proposal. But the United States and North Korea, the main antagonists since the first round of talks more than two years ago, continued to insist on changes and clarifications. Japan in the past has aligned its position with that of the United States.

    © 2005 The Washington Post Company

    Halleluyah! It's about GD time!

  • #2
    NYTimes
    September 19, 2005
    North Korea Says It Will Abandon Nuclear Efforts
    By JOSEPH KAHN
    BEIJING, Monday, Sept. 19 - North Korea agreed Monday to end its nuclear weapons program in return for security, economic and energy benefits, potentially easing tensions with the United States after a two-year standoff over the North's efforts to build atomic bombs.

    The United States, North Korea and four other nations participating in negotiations in Beijing signed a draft accord in which the North promised to abandon efforts to produce nuclear weapons and re-admit international inspectors to its nuclear facilities.

    Foreign powers said they would provide aid, diplomatic assurances and security guarantees and consider North Korea's demands for a light-water nuclear reactor.

    The agreement is preliminary and will require more rounds of negotiations to flesh out because it does not address a range of issues like timing and implementation that are likely to prove contentious. China announced that the nations taking part in the talks would reconvene in November to continue ironing out the details.

    Even so, the agreement marks the first time since the United States accused North Korea violating a previous accord in 2002 that the two countries have drawn up a road map for ending their dispute through peaceful means.

    It also appears to rescue a diplomatic process that appeared to be on the verge of collapse after multiple rounds of negotiations failed to produce even a joint statement of principles. The Bush administration had said it was prepared to take tougher measures, including freezing North Korean assets abroad and pushing for international sanctions, if the latest round of talks collapsed.

    Christopher Hill, the chief American negotiator, had said before the agreement was announced that he was determined to end the discussions and return to Washington. The breakthrough came at the last minute, after American officials had prepared to wrap up the negotiations without an accord.

    Progress in the talks may also give the United States and European countries some diplomatic momentum in their negotiations with Iran over its nuclear weapons program, which is not considered as advanced as the North Korean one.

    More generally, it would appear to boost support for people inside the Bush administration who favored pursuing laborious negotiations with the North Koreans. Hard-liners in the administration and in Congress had raised questions about the usefulness of negotiations with the North, which they argued had no intention of abandoning its nuclear weapons.

    The draft accord commits North Korea to scrap all of its existing nuclear weapons and nuclear production facilities, to rejoin the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, and to readmit international nuclear inspectors. North Korea withdrew from the treaty and expelled inspectors in 2002, after the United States accused it of violating a previous agreement to end its nuclear program.

    The United States and North Korea also pledged to respect each other's sovereignty and right to peaceful coexistence and to work toward normalization of relations. The two countries have no full diplomatic relations and did not sign a peace treaty after the Korean War.

    Washington declared as part of the agreement that it does not have any nuclear weapons at its bases in South Korea and that it "has no intention to attack or invade the D.P.R.K. with nuclear or conventional weapons." The D.P.R.K. stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's formal name.

    The accord finessed what had been the biggest sticking point in the latest round of talks - the light-water nuclear reactor - by leaving it to be resolved in future discussions. North Korea demanded throughout the week-long session that the international community agree to provide it with a light-water reactor before it took steps to dismantle its nuclear program.

    The United States firmly rejected that demand, though it did not rule out the possibility that the North could retain some kind of civilian nuclear program down the road if it abandoned its weapons program.

    The statement said North Korea claimed the right to pursue "peaceful uses of nuclear energy." Mr. Hill said he expected that a light-water reactor would cost $2 billion to $3 billion and would take a decade to build. While a light-water reactor does not produce fuel for atomic weapons the way the North's existing modified-graphite reactors do, American officials have said it still raises proliferation risks and cannot be a first step in arranging the nuclear disarmament of the country.

    North Korea has said it requires the new nuclear plant to provide electricity. But Mr. Hill said building a new nuclear plant would be an inefficient way of boosting electricity supplies. He said the North considers a civilian nuclear plant a "trophy."

    The draft agreement includes a commitment by South Korea to build power plants and transmission lines to provide the North with two thousand megawatts of electricity, enough to roughly double to total supply of electrical power for its northern neighbor.

    Although many details remain unresolved, the accord appears to be a significant victory for China. Beijing brokered the agreement after being the host for multiple rounds of difficult and inclusive talks. It cajoled both the United States and North Korea to continue meeting each other despite repeated threats by both sides to discontinue negotiations.

    China has long argued that North Korea's nuclear problems cannot be dealt with through pressure or military force and must be addressed through comprehensive negotiations aimed at addressing the North's full range of concerns.

    The Bush administration also overhauled the substance and the style of its approach to North Korea. Officials stopped using the accusatory language President Bush once used when he called North Korea a member of the "axis of evil" and called the nation's leader, Kim Jong Il, a tyrant.

    Instead, the Americans have worked closely with South Korea and China to address the North's security and economic concerns and have reassured the North that the United States recognizes it as sovereign. Officials relaxed their stand on the North retaining some kind of peaceful nuclear program, and offered the prospect of normalizing relations with country.

    Ultimately, the agreement will still face hurdles, including the degree of intrusiveness of inspections in the closed North Korean state, as well as to scope and nature of any peaceful nuclear program the North is allowed to retain.

    Comment


    • #3
      I'll believe it when I see it. They're about as trustworthy as a rattlesnake.

      NK was supposed to do the same thing after Clinton signed a deal with 'em in the mid 90's, and look where we are now.

      Dr. Mordrid
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

      Comment


      • #4
        i have a bridge to sell. Wonder what the real price of appeasment will be !

        Comment


        • #5
          That didnt take long for them to **** it up

          Why is it called tourist season, if we can't shoot at them?

          Comment


          • #6
            [spooky muppet voice]

            DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT!

            [/spooky muppet voice]
            The Internet - where men are men, women are men, and teenage girls are FBI agents!

            I'm the least you could do
            If only life were as easy as you
            I'm the least you could do, oh yeah
            If only life were as easy as you
            I would still get screwed

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