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Old School Stoner
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U.S. envoy arrives in Seoul for talks
U.S. envoy arrives in Seoul for talks
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State James Kelly arrives in Seoul on Sunday.
Jan. 12 -- The nuclear crisis cultivated by North Korea's Kim Jong Il brings Assistant Secretary of State James Kelly to Asia for talks aimed at defusing the situation. NBC's Donna Fratangelo reports.
Kelly says energy aid
to N. Korea a possibility
NBC, MSNBC AND NEWS SERVICES
Jan. 13 — Assistant U.S. Secretary of State James Kelly, in Seoul for talks on the North Korean nuclear standoff, said Monday that the United States is willing to consider energy aid to the north if it ends nuclear weapons development. “Once we get beyond nuclear weapons, there may be opportunities with the U.S., with private investors, with other countries to help North Korea in the energy area,” Kelly said at a news conference.
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KELLY WAS to meet Monday with the South’s President-elect Roh Moo-hyun, who espouses diplomacy as the only solution to the crisis, and some of Roh’s top advisers. Kelly also will visit China, Singapore, Indonesia and Japan.
As Kelly arrived in Seoul to try to defuse the region’s escalating crisis — “We are going to talk positively,” he told reporters — North Korea denied admitting to U.S. officials that it had a secret nuclear weapons program, and said it would unleash a “sea of fire” if the United States challenges the communist country.
Meanwhile, a day after meeting with a North Korean official, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said Pyongyang is ready to negotiate directly with the United States about its nuclear weapons programs, even despite the country’s bellicose rhetoric.
‘SINISTER INTENTIONS’ ALLEGED
North Korea on Sunday accused the United States of “sinister intentions,” backing away from what the United States had described as an admission in October that it was running a covert program to enrich uranium for nuclear arms in violation of a 1994 agreement.
“The claim that we admitted developing nuclear weapons is an invention fabricated by the U.S. with sinister intentions,” the news service Yonhap quoted the official Rodong Sinmun newspaper as saying.
The nuclear tension could be discussed at Cabinet-level talks between the two Koreas; the talks are scheduled for Jan. 21-24 in Seoul. However, North Korea has said the issue is strictly a matter between it and the United States.
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In the past few days, North Korea has sent sharply mixed messages. Pyongyang withdrew from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and threatened on Saturday to resume long-range missile tests, vowing to “smash U.S. nuclear maniacs” in a “holy war.” At the same time, its diplomats in the United States told Gov. Richardson their country had no intention of building nuclear bombs.
On Sunday, the newspaper blamed the United States for the current crisis and warned: “If the United States evades its responsibility and challenges us, we’ll turn the citadel of imperialists into a sea of fire.”
WAR OF WORDS
On Saturday, the United States warned that North Korea’s insults to Washington and threats to end its self-imposed moratorium on ballistic missile tests were “steps in the wrong direction” that would only increase tensions and Pyongyang’s isolation. North Korea’s deputy U.N. ambassador Han Song Ryol insisted that his country had no plans to build nuclear weapons, but the Bush administration said the regime continued failing address “issues of concern” to the international community.
The administration issued the statement after Richardson ended three days of talks in New Mexico with a senior North Korean official.
“In New Mexico, North Korea stated its willingness to have a dialogue,” a senior administration official said. “Unfortunately, North Korean delegates did not address the issues of concern to the international community.”
While the delegates were in New Mexico, North Korea “continued to take steps in the wrong direction” by announcing its withdrawal from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and threatening to end a moratorium on missile testing, the official said.
“The U.S. has made it clear that we are prepared to talk to North Korea about how it would meet its obligations to the international community. ... The usual channels of communications remain open for the U.S. and North Korea,” the official said.
THREATENING TO TEST
Mohamed ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told North Korea that its decision would be taken up by the U.N. Security Council if it did not change course.
North Korea, which has not tested long-range missiles in four years, threatened to do so Saturday unless the United States took steps to improve relations. In 1998 the regime test-fired one that flew over Japan and landed in the Pacific Ocean. Still, U.S. intelligence officials believe North Korea has been working on missiles that could reach Alaska and Hawaii, and they believe Pyongyang has already developed missiles that could hit anywhere in South Korea and much of Japan.
The North announced its withdrawal from the global nuclear arms control treaty Friday. Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told North Korea that its decision would be taken up by the U.N. Security Council in a matter of weeks if it did not change course. “This is not an open-ended invitation for cooperation,” he said.
North Korea is a signatory to the nonproliferation treaty, under which only the five major nuclear powers are allowed to maintain a nuclear arsenal while gradually disarming. Under the treaty, other states agree not to develop or acquire nuclear weapons.
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Massive North Korean rally
Jan. 11 — In a government-controlled rally, an estimated 1 million people gathered to support what North Korea calls a life-and-death battle against its enemies. NBC’s Dawn Fratangelo reports from Seoul.
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DIPLOMATIC FLURRY
In discussions on Saturday with Richardson, who was President Clinton’s ambassador to the United Nations, Han, North Korea’s deputy U.N. ambassador, insisted that his country had no plans to build nuclear weapons.
Richardson said Han told him that the North wanted better relations with the United States.
“He told me that in a dialogue with the United States, North Korea would discuss America’s concerns over verifying its nuclear program. I think that’s positive,” Richardson said, ending three days of meetings with two North Korean envoys in Sante Fe, N.M.
Richardson, who was a surprise intermediary in the dispute, said he briefed Secretary of State Colin Powell on the talks but emphasized that he was not an official representative of the Bush administration.
On Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” Richardson suggested a bilateral nonaggression binding pact that says the United States will not attack North Korea, in exchange for steps such as freezing its nuclear program and allowing international inspectors back into the country.
“The North Koreans said they’re ready to do that, but only after a negotiation,” Richardson said.
fact file
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
• Member states • Treaty articles • The IAEA
The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty was established in 1970 with the purpose of stopping the spread of nuclear weapons. Under the treaty, the five nuclear weapons states -- the United States, Russia, China, France and the United Kingdom -- agree to pursue general disarmament. Signatories from non-nuclear weapons states agree to forgo nuclear weapons acquisition or development.
With 187 signatories, the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty is the largest nuclear weapons treaty in the world. But the NPT is not universal. In January 2003 North Korea pulled out of the treaty, saying that the IAEA was “a tool for executing the U.S. hostile policy.”
In addition, three nuclear powers – India, Israel and Pakistan – have never signed the treaty. Joining today would require them to sign up as a non-nuclear weapons state and dismantle their nuclear weapons. The treaty restricts nuclear weapons state status to those nations in possession of nuclear explosives prior to Jan. 1, 1967. In 1991 South Africa dismantled its nuclear weapons program after signing the treaty.
For more information about nuclear arsenals: The nuclear-armed planet
Weapons
The nuclear powers agree not to help non-nuclear weapons states to develop or acquire an arsenal. In turn non-nuclear weapons states agree not to pursue nuclear weapons development. To verify compliance, the treaty assigns the International Atomic Energy Agency with the task of inspecting non-nuclear weapon states’ nuclear facilities.
Nuclear energy
All states have the right to produce nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. States can exchange nuclear-related information, technology and fissionable materials provided they -- and related research facilities and other sites -- are subject to IAEA safeguards.
North Korea
Given the guarantee of nuclear energy research and production, North Korea’s decision to reject the treaty while maintaining its line that it will not pursue nuclear weapons, has puzzled the United Nations.
Created in 1957 as United Nations agency, the IAEA describes itself as an international forum for scientific and technical cooperation in the use of nuclear technology. The tasks of the Vienna-based body include developing nuclear safety standards, maintaining safeguards associated with membership in the Nuclear Proliferation Treaty and protecting humans and the environment from nuclear radiation.
The IAEA has faced difficulties. Weapons inspections in Iraq has put a strain on agency manpower. North Korea, meanwhile, has refused to comply with IAEA safeguards since 1993. In January 2003, North Korea expelled the agency’s two inspectors after breaking the seals and cameras that monitored its nuclear facilities.
The IAEA relies on its 134 member states for financial and political support as well as nuclear intelligence including satellite photos.
Source: IAEA; Arms Control Association
Printable version
Meantime, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, fresh from talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, met in eastern Russia with Konstantin Pulikovsky, a Russian point man on North Korea who is believed to have close ties to its reclusive leader, Kim Jong Il.
“It is important that North Korea be steadfastly worked upon to gain a peaceful solution,” Koizumi told Pulikovsky, Putin’s prefect for the far east.
Pulikovsky said his knowledge of North Korea’s leader suggested a soft approach was likely to be more effective. “He will not permit being pressured from outside,” Pulikovsky was quoted as saying. “He will only be repelled by this.”
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WARNING FROM PYONGYANG
The North warned the United States not to take military action as it announced it would withdraw from the treaty. Pyongyang said that a “new Korean War will finally lead to the Third World War” and that the North could hold its own in a “fire-to-fire standoff.” The comment was distributed by the official North Korean news agency in English.
The treaty requires a withdrawing nation to give three months’ notice. North Korea, however, said it was withdrawing as of Saturday.
The Korean Peninsula
MSNBC Interactive
• The arms balance in the world's most militarized region.
Britain, Germany, Australia, Japan, the Philippines and Russia were among countries that expressed deep concern. Britain condemned the North Korean move as “a wrong decision.”
The outgoing South Korean President, Kim Dae-jung, said dialogue was the only way to resolve the crisis, which he called a matter of “life and death.” The Foreign Ministry said the North’s withdrawal was a “serious threat to peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula” and urged it to retract its decision.
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