PDA

View Full Version : Negotiators: N. Korea to halt nuke programs



5:01 am
09-19-2005, 01:47 AM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9375104/

Negotiators: N. Korea to halt nuke programs
In breakthrough, Pyongyang vows to rejoin arms treaty, allow inspectors

Updated: 12:47 a.m. ET Sept. 19, 2005

BEIJING - North Korea pledged to drop its nuclear weapons development and rejoin international arms treaties in a unanimous agreement Monday at six-party arms talks. The agreement was the first-ever joint statement after more than two years of negotiations.

The North “promised to drop all nuclear weapons and current nuclear programs and to get back to the (Nuclear) Nonproliferation Treaty as soon as possible and to accept inspections” by the International Atomic Energy Agency, according to the agreement by the six countries at the talks.

The North and the United States also pledged to mutually respect each other’s sovereignty and right to peaceful coexistence in the agreement.

Earlier Monday, the top U.S. negotiator said talks seeking to convince Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons program were in their “endgame.”

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said the talks would wrap up after negotiators met to discuss a Chinese compromise proposal.

“We’re at the endgame,” Hill said as he left his hotel early Monday.

Hill declined to reveal specifics of the proposal. Russia’s envoy said earlier that it acknowledged North Korea’s right to a peaceful nuclear program after disarming — but it was not known if that draft had been revised.

Washington had previously rejected allowing North Korea any atomic program, saying its decades of relentlessly pursuing a nuclear bomb means it can’t be trusted.

Hill said North Korea “has some demands and the question is whether anybody accepts those demands.”

“I think we have a pretty good arrangement on that, but I have to see what it looks like finally,” he said.

‘Time to make a decision’
South Korea’s main envoy, Song Min-soon, said Monday that it was “time to make a decision.”

He added that a resolution depended on all six countries at the talks — China, Japan, Russia, the United States and the two Koreas.

“It is not a situation where just one party decides whether to accept,” Song said.

The night before Hill said he was leaving at the end of Monday no matter what happened at the meeting for all six delegations to state their positions.

“Everyone knows each other’s positions, everyone knows the agreement, everyone can almost recite it from memory at this point, so I’m not sure we have to do too much talking,” he said Sunday evening. “I think we have to sort of ... put the cards on the table and see where we are.”

Hill described the proposal before the talks as “a good effort to try to bridge the remaining differences, which I believe are difficult but certainly not insurmountable.”

That was far more optimistic than his view Saturday, when he said the United States and several other countries had problems with the document’s wording.

“It’s a good draft for all concerned, and I think it’s especially a really great opportunity for” North Korea, he said Sunday.

North Korea had not commented publicly on the proposal, but after it was put forward Friday, a spokesman denounced efforts to get the North to give up its nuclear weapons program without concessions from the United States.

Pyongyang offered raft of incentives
Participants have offered economic aid, security guarantees from Washington and free electricity from South Korea in exchange for dismantling its weapons program.

North Korea has demanded to be given a light-water nuclear reactor for generating electricity before disarming, promising to open that facility to co-management and international inspections.

The Pyongyang regime was promised two light-water reactors — believed to be more difficult to use in diverting radioactive material for making nuclear bombs — under a 1994 deal. But that agreement unraveled in late 2002 when U.S. officials said the North admitted it was building atomic bombs, leading to the current diplomatic effort to find resolve the standoff.

“There is still a chance of reaching an agreement,” Japanese envoy Kenichiro Sasae said Sunday evening, also sounding more positive than a day before.

Meanwhile, the head of the Pyongyang office of the United Nations’ World Food Program said Sunday that a decade of emergency aid shipments to North Korea would end by January at the request of the country’s communist government.

“They claim they have enough food coming in from other sources,” Richard Ragan told The Associated Press, indicating that included aid from South Korea and increased trade with China. “They didn’t want to create a culture of dependency.”

Since starting emergency aid in 1995, the WFP has distributed about 4 million tons of food worth $1.5 billion to North Koreans. That has included donations from the United States, despite the continuing nuclear standoff and Pyongyang’s constant saber-rattling at Washington as its main enemy.

Nitro Express
09-19-2005, 02:48 AM
Take it with a grain of salt. That crazy motherfucker running N. Korea is a bastard and is going to play all sorts of games with the inspectors just like Saddam did.

Nitro Express
09-19-2005, 02:49 AM
What he gets out of the deal, it new infastructer built by us for free. He always can turn on us at any time.

Little Texan
09-19-2005, 03:57 AM
I wouldn't trust them fuckers are far as I could throw them! You think they are really going to give up their nuke program? I think not. Remember how the Clinton Administration struck a deal with them a decade ago only to find out they had been developing nuclear weapons that whole time anyway behind our backs? They won't halt their nuclear ambitions...they'll carry on in secret, just as before.

Hardrock69
09-19-2005, 10:44 AM
That North Korean bastard is a psycho motherfucker who needs to be shot!

PERIOD!


**BLAM!**

FORD
09-19-2005, 11:08 AM
Kim jung what'shis ass is the same as Chimp..... A spoiled little mama's boy still trying to win daddy's approval by doing his daddy's job.

If any progress was made here toward the NK's disarming though, I'm sure China leaning on them had a lot more to do with it than the BCE.

frets5150
09-19-2005, 06:05 PM
Yeah i don't trust that HU FLUNG SHIT guy either.:D

frets5150
09-19-2005, 06:05 PM
:cato2:

Little Texan
09-19-2005, 06:58 PM
Hey, isn't that Alex Van Halen?

Hardrock69
09-19-2005, 10:43 PM
I wish China would just fucking invade North Korea and stomp that little bastard into the ground....

5:01 am
09-20-2005, 12:36 AM
http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGBO8IFLTDE.html

North Korea Says It Will Not Dismantle Nuclear Weapons Until It Gets Light Water Reactors

By Jae-Soon Chang Associated Press Writer
Published: Sep 19, 2005


SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - North Korea said Tuesday it would not dismantle its nuclear weapons program until the United States first provides an atomic energy reactor, casting doubt on its commitment to a breakthrough agreement reached at international arms talks.

The North insisted during arms talks that began last week in Beijing that it be given a light-water reactor, a type less easily diverted for weapons use, in exchange for abandoning nuclear weapons. The agreement reached at the talks' end Monday - the first since the negotiations began in August 2003 - says the six countries in the negotiations will discuss the reactor issue "at an appropriate time."

Both the United States and Japan, members of the six-nation disarmament talks, rejected the North's latest demand.

"This is not the agreement that they signed and we'll give them some time to reflect on the agreement they signed," U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in New York, where he was with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice at meetings of the U.N. Security Council.

"The Japanese side has continuously said that North Korea's demand is unacceptable," Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura told reporters.

The Beijing agreement called for the North to abandon it arms efforts and accept inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency in exchange for energy, economic and security aid.

But the North's statement Tuesday indicated it was again raising the reactor demand as a prerequisite for disarming.

"We will return to the NPT and sign the safeguards agreement with the IAEA and comply with it immediately upon the U.S. provision of LWRs, a basis of confidence-building to us," the North's Foreign Ministry said in the statement, carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency.

"The U.S. should not even dream of the issue of (North Korea's) dismantlement of its nuclear deterrent before providing LWRs," the North said.

The impact of the North's statement wasn't immediately clear. During the years of debate over its weapons program, the communist nation has sometimes given confusing or dramatic statements as it publicly maneuvers for negotiating leverage.

Other countries at the talks made clear that the reactor could only be discussed after the North rejoins the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and accepts inspections from the International Atomic Energy Agency - which North Korea pledged to do in Monday's agreement.

U.S. State Department spokesman Adam Ereli emphasized earlier in Washington that the "appropriate time" for discussing the reactor means only after the North comes in compliance with those conditions.

"It's a theoretical proposition in the future, contingent on dismantling having taken place, resigning up to the NPT and having IAEA safeguards in place," he said Monday in Washington.

The North's position is likely to be a major sticking point in talks slated to begin in early November on implementing Monday's agreement.

The North had demanded during the six-nation talks in Beijing - which include China, Japan, Russia, the United States and the two Koreas - that it be allowed to keep a civilian nuclear program for power generation after it disarms.

But the United States strongly opposed the demand, and Monday's agreement only acknowledged that the North had "stated" its claim to that right.

The administration of U.S. President George W. Bush has opposed anything resembling a 1994 U.S.-North Korea agreement, which promised the North two light-water reactors for power. That project stalled amid the current crisis that broke out in late 2002 over the North's resumed nuclear weapons program.

---

5:01 am
09-21-2005, 12:49 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/09/20/korea.north.talks/index.html

U.S., Russia reject N Korea demand
Pyongyang: Ending weapons program tied to civilian power

UNITED NATIONS (CNN) -- U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and her Russian counterpart have rejected a North Korean statement that Pyongyang would begin dismantling its nuclear program only if the United States provided a light-water reactor for civilian power.

Pyongyang's official news agency earlier in the day printed the demand from a spokesman for the North Korean Foreign Ministry -- comments that threatened to unravel an agreement reached in Beijing on Monday among North Korea, its neighbors and the United States.

"We will stick to the text of the Beijing statement and I believe that we can make progress if everybody sticks to what was actually agreed to," Rice told reporters at the United Nations Tuesday.

"The text of the agreement says that we'll discuss a light-water reactor at an appropriate time. There were several statements afterwards that make clear what that sequence is."

She said those steps included: North Korea abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs, returning to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT) and abiding by International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards.

Only then could the issue of light-water reactors be discussed, Rice said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, whose country took part in the six-party talks that led to the agreement, said, "The text was very carefully agreed upon and it was the subject of very difficult compromises, but it clearly sets forth the consistency of the steps which have to be taken so that we might talk about cooperation in the development of nuclear energy in North Korea."

He added, "The most important thing now is to see to it that this agreement be carried out in practice, and this involves a great deal of work ahead and we hope that it will begin soon."

Rice met with Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing Tuesday in New York. According to U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack, "Both agreed that the agreement signed in Beijing by the six parties was the binding text for parties, including on the question of light-water reactors."

In the North Korean news agency report, a spokesman for the North Korean Foreign Ministry was quoted as saying, "Without this physical guarantee of the (light-water reactor), our position is not to even dream of us giving up our nuclear deterrence."

"It has yet to be seen how the U.S. will realize its promise, but if the U.S. continues to demand the giving up of our nuclear weapons prior to providing the (reactor), then nothing changes between the nuclear relationship between the U.S. and North Korea."

In Tokyo, the Kyodo news agency quoted Japanese Foreign Minister Nobutaka Machimura as saying North Korea's latest demand was unacceptable, The Associated Press reported.

But South Korea's reaction was more muted, with a key minister saying the demand was to be expected and that it would not jeopardize Monday's deal.

South Korean Unification Minister Chung Dong-young said on a radio program the North's response to the agreement could be handled in diplomatic talks before a further round of negotiations, Reuters reports.

Those comments came a day after North Korea agreed to give up its entire nuclear program, including weapons -- a landmark agreement that was announced in a joint statement from six-party nuclear arms talks in Beijing.

The joint statement said North Korea had "committed to abandoning all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs" and had agreed to return to the NPT and to abide by safeguards established by the IAEA, the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog.

The statement also said that North Korea stated that it has the right to "peaceful uses of nuclear energy." (Full statement)

The agreement came on what was the seventh day of the fourth round of six-party talks. A fifth round of talks has been scheduled for November.

As part of the agreement, the United States, China, Japan, Russia and South Korea "stated their willingness" to provide energy assistance to North Korea, as well as to promote economic cooperation.

The World Food Program has said that North Korea is headed toward the worst humanitarian food crisis since the mid 1990s, when an estimated 1 million North Koreans died. It said 6.5 million North Koreans desperately need food aid. (U.N. to end food aid to N. Korea)

North Korea ordered U.N. nuclear inspectors out of the country nearly three years ago, and it has since said it has a nuclear weapon and continues to pursue producing more.

The United States, along with the four other nations involved in the talks, has said the Korean peninsula must not have nuclear weapons.

BITEYOASS
09-21-2005, 04:57 PM
Originally posted by Hardrock69
I wish China would just fucking invade North Korea and stomp that little bastard into the ground....

Dito! Plus he owes them for helping save his dad's ass in the first Korean war.

BITEYOASS
09-21-2005, 04:58 PM
Fuck I think China had 1,000,000 casualties in the Korean war so that his spoiled ass can drive a mercedes around the slums of Pyongyang.

Little Texan
09-21-2005, 05:56 PM
That piece of shit is living in luxury while the people in his country are starving to death, not to mention all of the human rights abuses incurred by that regime over the years!