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NKorea says it has produced more bomb-making plutonium

China won't tighten screws on North Korea: think-tank
North Korea's military provocations this year angered its ally China but Beijing remains reluctant to tighten the screws on Pyongyang, an influential think-tank said Tuesday. China is more concerned about its neighbour's stability than its nuclear programme and views the nuclear issue as mainly the responsibility of the United States, the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG) said in a report.

The North's April rocket launch and withdrawal from six-party nuclear disarmament talks, and its nuclear test in May, coincided with reports that leader Kim Jong-Il may be seriously ill. "Together, the nuclear tensions and succession worries drew out an unusually public, and critical, discussion in China about its ties with North Korea," the report said.

Beijing backed new United Nations sanctions against Pyongyang but its strategic calculations remain unchanged, the ICG said. It would continue to shield its neighbour from the effect of stronger sanctions. "China prioritises stability over denuclearisation due to a vastly different perception than the US and its allies of the threat posed by a nuclear North Korea," the report said. Its greatest concerns were a possible military confrontation between North Korea and the US, regime collapse, a flood of hundreds of thousands of North Korean refugees into China, or "precipitous reunification" with South Korea leading to a US military presence north of the 38th parallel.

In order to limit the damage that sanctions might do to Kim's regime "it remains reluctant to tighten the screws on Pyongyang." While the North's "dangerous brinkmanship" had sparked a continuing policy debate, China overall remained averse to any move which might destabilise a border state. "Beijing therefore views the nuclear issue as a longer-term endeavour for which the US is principally responsible, and continues to strengthen its bilateral relationship with North Korea," the ICG said. China does not want North Korea to have nuclear weapons, said Robert Templer, the ICG's Asia programme director, in a statement.

"But it is willing to go only so far in applying pressure, as it wants instability on its periphery even less." The North Monday repeated its call for direct talks with the United States to end the nuclear standoff, and said successful bilateral talks could lead to a resumption of the six-nation negotiations chaired by China. The US State Department said it was still considering whether to hold talks.

by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Nov 4, 2009
North Korea announced Tuesday it has produced more plutonium for its atomic weapons programme, putting further pressure on the United States to start direct talks.

The communist country "successfully completed reprocessing 8,000 spent fuel rods by the end of August" at its Yongbyon nuclear complex, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said.

"Noticeable successes have been made in turning the extracted plutonium weapon-grade for the purpose of bolstering up the nuclear deterrent," it said.

The comments indicated growing impatience at Washington's delay in accepting Pyongyang's offer of high-level bilateral talks to end the nuclear standoff.

On Monday its foreign ministry pressed the United States to agree to such talks, and said these could lead to a resumption of stalled six-nation nuclear disarmament negotiations.

"If the US is not ready to sit at a negotiating table with the DPRK (North Korea), it will go its own way," the ministry added.

The US reacted angrily to the announcement, saying North Korea's plutonium production for atomic weapons "runs counter" to its own statements and "violates" UN Security Council resolutions.

Experts believe the 8,000 spent reactor fuel rods could produce enough plutonium for one or two nuclear bombs, in addition to the North's current stockpile which could perhaps be used to create six to eight weapons.

"It certainly runs counter to the commitment that they made in 2005, and it violates UN Security Council resolutions," US State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters.

But he declined to say whether he believed the announcement contributed to tension with North Korea.

"What we're focused on with North Korea is getting to the point where we can relaunch the six-party talks, which will get us to our ultimate goal, which is the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," he said.

The North quit the six-party talks in April after the United Nations censured its long-range rocket launch, and vowed to restart the nuclear programme which it shut down under a 2007 six-party pact.

It conducted an atomic weapons test in May, the second since 2006.

In September the North also said it was in the final stages of an experimental highly enriched uranium programme -- a second way to make atomic weapons.

KCNA in a separate report Tuesday said the North was working hard to expand production of mineral resources including uranium. It said the uranium was intended to fuel a light-water reactor which is to be constructed.

Seoul officials quoted by Yonhap news agency confirmed Monday that the North had apparently reopened the plutonium reprocessing plant.

After months of bellicose moves including a series of missile tests, the North in August began making peace overtures and invited the US special envoy on North Korea, Stephen Bosworth, to visit Pyongyang.

In early October leader Kim Jong-Il told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao his country was ready to return to six-party negotiations, but only after it had talked directly to the United States to improve "hostile relations."

The North has long sought direct talks with the United States and is unenthusiastic about the multilateral framework which also involves South Korea, China, Russia and Japan.

Washington says it is open to such talks but these would be limited to bringing Pyongyang back to the six-party framework. It says it has made no decision on any visit by Bosworth.

But Russia said on Tuesday it was unrealistic for North Korea to seek improved ties with Washington, adding that Pyongyang would be better off returning to the negotiating table for six-party talks.

Many analysts suspect the North wants US recognition as a nuclear-armed state, possibly in return for guarantees of non-proliferation. Washington says it will never recognise a nuclear-armed North.

Pyongyang could also be trying to ease the impact of tougher United Nations sanctions imposed after the latest nuclear test.

China -- the North's sole major ally, leading trade partner and top energy supplier -- is often seen as crucial in pressuring the North.

But the International Crisis Group, in a report Tuesday, said Beijing was reluctant to tighten the screws on Pyongyang for fear of destabilising its regime and prompting a flood of refugees across the border.

earlier related report
'Unrealistic' for N Korea to seek better US ties: Russia
Russia on Tuesday said it was unrealistic for North Korea to seek improved ties with Washington, adding that Pyongyang would be better off returning to the negotiating table for six-party talks.

"Pyongyang says it is necessary for relations between the United States and North Korea to be transformed from one of enmity to normal, friendly and cooperative relations," a Russian diplomat close to the talks said.

"I don't know if this is possible in the short term," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The comments came after North Korea on Monday pressed the United States to hold direct talks on ending their nuclear standoff and vowed to "go its own way" if Washington refused to do so.

North Korea quit the six-party talks that seek to defuse the tensions on its nuclear programme in April after the United Nations censured it for a long-range missile launch. In May, it then staged a second atomic weapons test.

Besides North Korea and the United States, China, Russia, South Korea and Japan were involved in the talks.

The Russian diplomat said Moscow did not believe that revamped US-North Korea ties was "a necessary condition for the six-party talks"

"I even think we all understand that to achieve such a condition is unrealistic, so it is necessary to restart the six-party talks."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said last week the US will never have "normal, sanctions-free relations" with a nuclear-armed North Korea.

Russia maintains an embassy in Pyongyang and has some of the closest ties with its leader Kim Jong-Il of the six countries involved in the talks, the Russian diplomat underlined.

"To us, North Korea -- with whom we share a common border, even if it is not very long -- is our neighbour. It is our historical partner," he said, adding Moscow was prepared to help the North develop its "big economic potential."

Earlier Tuesday, North Korea declared it had produced more plutonium for its atomic weapons programme, in a bid to put further pressure on the US to start direct talks.

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North Korea pushes for direct U.S. talks
Seoul (UPI) Nov 2, 2009
North Korea again urged the United States to accept its demand for direct talks on Pyongyang's nuclear programs, warning that the country will "go our own way" if Washington refuses dialogue. In early October, North Korea said it could return to the stalled six-nation talks on its nuclear weapons drive, on condition that it first has one-on-one talks with Washington and the talks make ... read more







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