|
Objections may delay N. Korea
resolution
United Nations
- Despite winning key concessions, Russia and China raised new
objections that could delay a vote Saturday on a U.N. Security Council
resolution imposing punishing sanctions on North Korea for its claimed
nuclear test.
U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said the
changes sought by Moscow and Beijing were essentially technical in
nature and a vote may still be possible Saturday.
The five permanent council members —
the U.S., Russia, China, Britain and France — and Japan were to meet
in the morning before the full 15-member council convenes to discuss
the changes.
"I'm still ready to go for a vote,
and we'll just have to see what the instructions are overnight, in
particular from Moscow and China," Bolton said late Friday.
The latest draft demands North Korea
eliminate all its nuclear weapons but expressly rules out military
action against the country, a demand by the Russians and Chinese. The
Americans also eliminated a complete ban on the sale of conventional
weapons; instead, the draft limits the embargo to major hardware such
as tanks, warships, combat aircraft and missiles.
But the resolution would still ban
the import or export of material and equipment that could be used to
make nuclear weapons or ballistic missiles, and would authorize all
countries to inspect cargo leaving and arriving in North Korea to
prevent any illegal trafficking.
In another key change to gain Chinese
and Russian support, the resolution now says local authorities will
cooperate in the inspection process, which covers shipments by land,
air and sea. Both China and Russia share borders with North Korea and
are uncomfortable with the possibility of the U.S. inderdicting ships
near their coasts. Bolton said he expected most actions would be
performed at ports.
The accord came as U.S. officials
said Friday that an air sampling after North Korea's claimed nuclear
test detected radioactive debris consistent with an atomic explosion.
However, the Bush administration and congressional officials said no
final determination had been made about the nature of Monday's
mystery-shrouded blast.
The officials spoke on condition of
anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the information.
Results from another test disclosed
Friday — an initial air sampling on Tuesday — showed no evidence of
radioactive particles that would be expected from a successful nuclear
detonation, a U.S. government intelligence official said.
Meanwhile, North Korean ships loaded
their final cargo of secondhand bicycles and household appliances in
the Japanese port city of Sakaiminato after Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe's Cabinet agreed to ban trade with the communist state. The
unilateral Japanese sanctions also include a six-month ban on travel
to Japan by all North Korean government officials.
The U.S. and other nations trying to
persuade the North to give up its atomic program continued a flurry of
high-level diplomatic visits. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
planned a trip next week to Asia; Russia sent an envoy to Pyongyang;
and the presidents of China and South Korea — the North's main sources
of trade and aid — met in Beijing to discuss the proposed resolution.
The U.S.-sponsored draft would
declare the claimed test had increased tension in northeast Asia,
creating "a clear threat to international peace and security." It
would declare the act in "flagrant disregard" of the council's appeal
not to detonate a nuclear device, demand that North Korea not conduct
any further test or launch any more ballistic missiles, and authorize
a range of economic and diplomatic sanctions.
The draft would freeze the financial
assets of and impose a travel ban on individuals and entities with any
connection to North Korea's weapons or missile programs. It would also
ban countries from selling luxury goods to North Korea.
Asked why, Bolton said, "I think the
North Korean population has been losing average height and weight over
the years and maybe this will be a little diet for Kim Jong Il," North
Korea's leader.
Chinese Ambassador Wang Guangya,
asked earlier whether Beijing was prepared to go along with the ban,
said: "I don't know what luxury goods means, because luxury goods can
mean many things for different people ... if they don't have it."
The latest draft resolution still
invokes Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter, which the U.S. views as a
necessary because it makes economic and diplomatic sanctions
mandatory.
China and Russia normally object to
the Chapter 7 provision because it carries the possibility of military
enforcement. The Bush administration used the same provision to
justify its invasion of Iraq, and Moscow and Beijing worry the U.S.
might do the same eventually with North Korea — even though President
Bush has said the U.S. has no plans to attack.
But in a compromise also used in July
to unanimously vote on a resolution condemning North Korean missile
launches, the text added mention of Article 41 of the chapter, which
permits only "means not involving the use of military force."
The resolution would rely on all
countries to implement the sanctions, but it would create a committee
comprising all 15 Security Council nations to monitor enforcement and
report any violations to the council.
Rice's trip to China, South Korea and
Japan is the next step in the U.S. diplomatic offensive at the United
Nations and with Pyongyang's neighbors. State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack said "she's going to be talking about the passage of
that resolution certainly, but really what comes after."
The trip is meant to present a
unified front to North Korea, which will be looking for any cracks in
the diplomatic coalition behind the U.N. statement.
A Russian nuclear envoy who visited
North Korea said Saturday he pressed the North to return to six-nation
nuclear disarmament talks. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander
Alexeyev said he had a "very useful" meeting Friday with Kim Gye Gwan,
the North's nuclear negotiator, but didn't say how Kim responded.
Alexeyev spoke on his arrival in Beijing from Pyongyang, North Korea's
capital.
Pyongyang has boycotted the
six-nation talks for the past 13 months to protest financial measures
imposed by Washington for alleged counterfeiting and money-laundering.
Earlier a Russian news agency quoted
Alexeyev as saying North Korea favors the implementation of a year-old
agreement to abandon its nuclear programs in exchange for aid and
security guarantees.
The report apparently referred to an
agreement reached in September 2005 at the talks involving the two
Koreas, the U.S., China, Russia and Japan. If the Russian report is
confirmed, it could signify a major breakthrough in efforts to curb
North Korea's nuclear ambitions. -- The
Associated Press
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|