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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

VOICE OF AMERICA
SLUG: 2-326500 US / N. Korea (L)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=8/10/05

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=US / KOREA

NUMBER=2-326500

BYLINE=STEPHANIE HO

DATELINE=WASHINGTON

CONTENT=

HEADLINE: US Envoy Says North Korea's Past Actions Damaging

INTRO: The top U.S. negotiator to the ongoing six-party North Korean nuclear talks says Pyongyang's past actions undermine its insistence for a civil nuclear program. VOA's Stephanie Ho reports from Washington.

TEXT: After nearly two weeks of meetings in Beijing, representatives from the United States, North Korea, China, South Korea, Japan and Russia took a break to consult with their governments.

One sticky issue is North Korea's insistence that it be allowed to pursue a peaceful nuclear energy program. In Washington Wednesday, Chief U.S. negotiator, Christopher Hill, indicated to reporters that Pyongyang's position is not acceptable.

/// HILL ACT ///

"It's our view that they (North Korea) do need to dismantle all their programs. This is a country that had trouble keeping peaceful energy peaceful."

/// END ACT ///

Ambassador Hill pointed to the Soviet-supplied reactor, Yongbyon, which Pyongyang had described as a research reactor that was producing electricity. After the collapse of a 1994 agreement with the United States, though, he said North Korea, which he referred to as the D.P.R.K, made Yongbyon's real purpose clear.

/// SECOND HILL ACT ///

"Within days, the D.P.R.K. had expelled the international inspectors, had pulled out of the N.P.T., the Non-Proliferation Treaty, expelled the inspectors, and then, within a couple of months, were then using this "peaceful" reactor to produce weapons-grade plutonium there. So, there's a track record that needs to be dealt with."

/// END ACT ///

The U.S. negotiator said he thinks North Korea's insistence on peaceful nuclear use is, in his words, the "wrong subject."

/// THIRD HILL ACT ///

"It seems that they should be focusing on what they need to do to get out of this weapons business, get in to the business of providing electricity to their citizens. You know, North Korea is one of the darkest countries, in terms of electricity. That is, they have so much of their capacity is offline because it's just not functioning. So, it seems that they should work on that and not work so much on the issue of downstream right to nuclear energy."

/// END ACT ///

Ambassador Hill added that North Korea's energy needs are addressed by the current deal.

/// FOURTH HILL ACT ///

"For example, the South Koreans, the Republic of Korea, came forward with a rather robust proposal, a serious proposal indeed, to provide energy, to provide electricity in, really, the near term. We're talking two and a half, three, years max. This would be a program that would get on line very rapidly and provide substantial amount of electricity that could meet a lot of the needs of D.P.R.K."

/// END ACT ///

The six-party nuclear talks started again last month, after more than a year-long hiatus. Following this brief recess, the current round is scheduled to resume in Beijing at the end of this month. (SIGNED)

NEB/SHO/PT



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