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Pyongyang vows to declare nukes, tests

Jordan Times

Friday-Saturday, August 29-30, 2003

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — North Korea announced at a six-nation conference on East Asian security that it intends to formally declare its possession of nuclear weapons and to carry out a nuclear test, a US official said Thursday. North Korean Deputy Foreign Minister Kim Yong-il also told the gathering in Beijing that his country has the means to deliver nuclear weapons, an apparent reference to the North's highly developed missile programme, the official said.

The comments cast a pall over Thursday's plenary session, which included representatives of the United States, South Korea, China, Japan and Russia, in addition to North Korea, raising questions about the success of negotiations scheduled to conclude Friday morning.

Nevertheless, the diplomats agreed on the need to hold more such talks and probably will, a South Korean official said.

James Kelly, the chief US delegate, demanded at the talks that North Korea engage in the verifiable and permanent dismantling of its nuclear weapons programmes, in return for which the United States would provide security guarantees and economic benefits to the impoverished nation, said the US administration official, asking not to be identified.

The US official said that when Russia and Japan attempted to point out some positive elements of the US

presentation, the North Korean delegate attacked them by name and said they were lying at the instruction of the United States. According to the administration official, China's delegate appeared visibly angry over Kim's statement but responded in a moderate tone.

Kim said his country was taking its position because the United States clearly had no intention of abandoning its hostile policy towards North Korea, the US official said.

US intelligence has not detected overt signs that North Korea is preparing to conduct a nuclear weapons test, said one US defence official, speaking on condition of anonymity. But such a test would presumably be underground, so preparatory work would be difficult to detect, the official said.

The United States has long believed that North Korea has at least one or two nuclear weapons and could have five or six within a matter of months.

The United States, North and South Korea, Russia, Japan and China are trying to balance US demands for an end to North Korea's nuclear programme and the communist nation's insistence on a nonaggression treaty with Washington and humanitarian aid.

"There is a consensus that the process of six-party talks should continue and is useful," said Wie Sung-rak, director general of the South Korean foreign ministry's North American Affairs Bureau.

Like other delegates from the talks, he chose his words carefully to avoid suggesting a formal agreement had been made.

Asked to verify a Russian media report that all six would meet again within two months, he said: "It's possible, but you have to wait until tomorrow morning."

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister and head of delegation Alexander Losyukov earlier said the six reached a "common understanding" to meet again within the next two months, probably in Beijing, the ITAR-Tass news agency reported.

In the past, US officials have noted that if North Korea conducted a nuclear weapons test, it would sacrifice a substantial part of its stockpile of weapons-grade plutonium, possibly halving its inventory from two weapons to one. However, Pyongyang had appeared to make moves aimed at restarting its plutonium production line.

Nuclear weapons can be made from either plutonium or uranium.

The US administration official said Kim on Thursday denied that the North has been developing a uranium-based nuclear weapon. The Bush administration has said North Korea acknowledged such a programme during talks in Pyongyang in October 2002.

Chief among the US concerns is that a nuclear-armed North Korea would be able to export nuclear weapons or technology or would touch off an arms race in northeast Asia.

 

 

 
Earth, a planet hungry for peace

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in the West Bank (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).

Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.

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