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North Korea vows to drop nuclear
program
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 first breakthrough in more than two years
of negotiations.
The North "committed to abandoning
all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs and returning at an
early date" to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and International
Atomic Energy Agency safeguards, according to the agreement.
In exchange, the North would receive
energy assistance and a pledge from the United States that it won't
attack.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Christopher Hill, the U.S. envoy to the talks, praised the agreement
but urged the North Koreans to stop operations at their main nuclear
facility at Yongbyon.
"It's a good agreement for all of
us," Hill said. But he added: "We have to see what comes in the days
and weeks ahead. We have to seize the momentum of this."
Negotiators agreed to hold more talks
in November, where they were expected to move on to concrete
discussions about implementing the broad principles outlined in
Monday's agreement. Hill has warned that could still be a long
process.
"The six parties unanimously
reaffirmed that the goal of the six-party talks is the verifiable
denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula in a peaceful manner," the
statement said.
North Korea and United States also
pledged in the agreement to respect each other's sovereignty and right
to peaceful coexistence, and also to take steps to normalize
relations.
"The United States affirmed that it
has no nuclear weapons on the Korean Peninsula and has no intention to
attack or invade (North Korea) with nuclear or conventional weapons,"
according to the statement, in assurances echoed by South Korea.
The talks, which began in August
2003, include China, Japan, Russia, the United States and the two
Koreas.
The negotiations had been deadlocked
over North Korea's demand that it keep the right to civilian nuclear
programs after it disarms, and the statement acknowledges the North
has made such an assertion but doesn't go beyond that.
North Korea had also demanded that it
be given a light-water nuclear reactor at the latest talks — a type
less easily diverted for weapons use — but Washington had said it and
other countries at the talks wouldn't meet that request.
Putting aside the question for now,
the joint statement said: "The other parties expressed their respect
and agreed to discuss at an appropriate time the subject of the
provision of light-water reactor" to North Korea.
North Korea has also refused to
totally disarm without getting concessions along the way, while
Washington has said it wants to see the weapons programs totally
dismantled before granting rewards. The statement, however, says the
sides agreed to take steps to implement the agreement "in a phased
manner in line with the principle of 'commitment for commitment,
action for action.'"
The other countries at the talks said
they were willing give energy assistance to the North, including a
South Korean plan to deliver electricity across the heavily armed
border dividing the peninsula.
"This is the most important result
since the six-party talks started more than two years ago," said
Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, Beijing's envoy.
Tang Jiaxuan, a former foreign
minister and now state councilor, congratulated the delegates,
praising the agreement for having "succinct wording and profound
content."
North Korea was promised two
light-water reactors under a 1994 deal with Washington to abandon its
nuclear weapons. That agreement fell apart in late 2002 with the
outbreak of the latest nuclear crisis, when U.S. officials said North
Korea admitted having a secret uranium enrichment program.
The North is believed to have enough
radioactive material for about a half-dozen bombs from its publicly
acknowledged plutonium program, but hasn't performed any known nuclear
tests to prove its capability. In February, the North claimed it had
nuclear weapons.
Japan and North Korea also said in
the statement they would move to normalize relations regarding "the
outstanding issues of concern." The reference appears to allude to
Tokyo's concerns over its citizens that the North has admitted
abducting. -- Associated
Press
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