. Military Space News .
NKorea nuclear talks stalled amid disputes

File image from previous six-party talks.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Jan 5, 2008
International efforts to put an end to North Korea's nuclear programme appeared to hit a snag Saturday after Pyongyang defiantly insisted it had lived up to its end of a six-party disarmament deal.

Days after the North missed a December 31 deadline to disable its nuclear plants and provide a full declaration of its nuclear facilities, it insisted it had given the list to the United States in November, a claim Washington denied.

North Korea said it had been forced to slow compliance with the deal reached last February as the other parties to the agreement -- China, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the US -- had not held up their end of the bargain.

It accused the other parties of failing to deliver promised energy aid, and also said the United States had not "honoured its commitments" to remove Pyongyang from its list of state sponsors of terrorism.

"Looking back on what has been done, one may say that the DPRK is going ahead of others in fulfilling its commitment," the North's foreign ministry said in a statement released late Friday.

Top US envoy Christopher Hill was to arrive in Tokyo on Monday at the start of a regional tour likely to focus on efforts to kickstart the long-running negotiations.

Analysts said the disarmament process had reached a turning point.

"Efforts to dismantle North Korea's nuclear facilities are now at a crossroads due to a dispute over a suspected uranium enrichment programme," Paik Hak-Soon, an analyst at Sejong Institute in Seoul, told AFP.

"Both North Korea and the United States are in a dilemma over how to establish the pattern of action," he said, adding that the North would look for "strong incentives" from Washington before proceeding with disarmament.

"The statement means that North Korea will not take further action until the United States and other parties reciprocate. They think they have done enough," Paik said.

Washington says it has evidence that Pyongyang imported material which could be used in a secret uranium enrichment programme. The North has never publicly admitted any such operation.

On the issue of the nuclear declaration, White House spokesman Tony Fratto said the United States was "still waiting" for North Korea's full account of its nuclear programmes.

"We are awaiting the declaration, and we want it to be complete, full and accurate, and so that's what we'll be looking for. And we don't have that yet," he said.

But the North's foreign ministry said it had drafted a report in November last year and notified Washington of its contents, adding that "the DPRK has done what it should do."

US officials did not deny that the two sides may have discussed some of the details of that report, but insisted the full list had not been delivered.

As for disablement, the North's foreign ministry said Friday that all operations "within the technologically possible scope" were completed as of December 31, with the unloading of spent fuel rods to be done within 100 days.

North Korea agreed last February to give up its nuclear weapons programmes in return for one million tonnes of fuel oil or equivalent energy aid, diplomatic benefits and security guarantees.

Under a final phase of the deal, it is to dismantle its plants and hand over all nuclear materials in return for diplomatic relations with the US and Japan, an end to sanctions and a formal peace pact on the Korean peninsula.

"Pyongyang is disappointed at slow action by Washington but still hopes to settle the issue through negotiations," said Dongguk University professor Koh Yu-Hwan.

"It may use its usual tactic of brinkmanship again in a bid to win greater concessions from the Bush administration before his term ends," he predicted.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com
Learn about missile defense at SpaceWar.com
All about missiles at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


NKorea says slowing nuclear deal compliance
Seoul (AFP) Jan 5, 2008
North Korea said Friday it had been forced to slow compliance with a six-nation nuclear disarmament deal in its first comments since missing a deadline to declare its atomic programmes.







  • Analysis: China's ability to sustain war
  • The Facts Of CFE Part One
  • Walker's World: A non-boring 2008
  • Japan, China pledge warmer ties, but no deal on gas fields

  • NKorea says slowing nuclear deal compliance
  • Hillary Clinton proposes joint oversight of Pakistan nukes
  • NKorea nuclear talks stalled amid disputes
  • NKorea vows to bolster 'war deterrence'

  • TOW-2A/B Radio Frequency Missiles For Kuwait
  • Outside View: Russian S-300s for Iran
  • Taiwan president raps China over missile build-up
  • Lockheed Martin Receives 849 Million Dollar Contract For Trident II D5 Missile

  • Global Ballistic Missile Defense Part Three
  • Japan's ABM message
  • Global Ballistic Missile Defense Systems In 2007
  • Czech PM aims to tie up deal on US defence shield: report

  • Antarctic ballooning hits milestone
  • Chinese major aircraft makers to build big planes: report
  • Dutch cops to ditch helicopters for airships in green bid: agency
  • China's rolls out first home-made commercial jet

  • MQ-9 Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Aircraft For UK
  • Raytheon Completes Testing Of US Navy's New Ship Control Segment For The MQ-8B Fire Scout
  • Korean Military To Use Elbit Systems Skylark II Tactical UAV
  • AAI Receives Order From US Army For 14 Additional Shadow Tactical UAS

  • Analysis: Iraq's '08 fate -- Basra, Kirkuk
  • Analysis Finds U.S. Lost Fallujah's Info War In 2004
  • Bush rejects another Iraq war spending law
  • Outside View: Basra key to 2008 in Iraq

  • Raytheon Wins Army Precision-Guided Projectile Development Contract
  • BAE Systems Completes Two Test Firings Of Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System
  • UK And France Launch New Partnership On Future Guided Weapons Technology
  • Boeing Submits Final KC-767 Advanced Tanker Proposal To USAF

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement