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US negotiator Christopher Hill
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North Korea's Kim Jong Il surveys army facility
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US official: North Korea agrees to nuke inspection demands

Washington to scratch communist nation from terrorism blacklist as Pyongyang indicates willing to open gates of all declared and undeclared nuclear facilities

North Korea has agreed to all US nuclear inspection demands, allowing the Bush administration to remove the communist country from a US terrorism blacklist, the Associated Press has learned.

 

North Korea will allow atomic experts to take samples and conduct forensic tests at all of its declared nuclear facilities and undeclared sites on mutual consent, a US official said Saturday. The North will permit experts to verify that it has told the truth about transfers of nuclear technology and an alleged uranium program, said the official.

 

The official spoke on condition of anonymity, not wanting to pre-empt Saturday's announcement of the agreement, which is aimed at salvaging a faltering nuclear disarmament accord in the short time before President George W. Bush leaves office in January.

 

"Every element that we sought in the verification discussions is part of this package," the official said .

 

Removing North Korea from the blacklist was immediately criticized by conservatives. The broader accord had been threatened by North Korea's refusal to accept such nuclear inspections because Washington had refused to drop the North from the list of state sponsors of terrorism.

 

That designation - now shared only by Cuba, Iran, Syria and Sudan - carries severe penalties, but US officials said North Korea would not see any immediate benefit because it is still penalized under other programs.

 

Reward for bad behavior

Still, critics jumped on the move saying it rewards the North for bad behavior and sends a bad signal to other US adversaries, notably Iran. US officials stressed that the North would be placed back on the list if it fails to comply with the plan to verify it has told the truth about its nuclear activities.

 

The US action came as North Korea has moved to restart a disabled nuclear reactor and takes other provocative steps ,including expelling UN inspectors and test-firing missiles. Those steps in recent weeks have heightened tensions in the region and place the shaky disarmament deal in peril.

 

It also followed days of intense internal debate in Washington and consultations with US negotiating partners China, South Korea, Russia and Japan. Tokyo had balked at the move because North Korea has not resolved issues related to its abduction of Japanese citizens.

 

The decision had been in the works since chief US negotiator Christopher Hill returned from a trip to North Korea late last week. On his visit, he proposed a face-saving compromise under which the North would accept the verification plan after the delisting was announced.

 

Previously, the US had insisted that the North agree to the deal first. Hill, a lightning rod for conservative hawks, was not expected to attend the State Department announcement. Critics pilloried it in part because it addresses only the North's plutonium program and does not deal with its involvement in spreading nuclear weapons technology or alleged uranium enrichment activities.

 

McCain slams deal

"With today's action, the administration has given up a critical instrument of leverage," said Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, the top Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee. "By rewarding North Korea before the regime has carried out its commitments, we are encouraging this regime to continue its illicit nuclear program and violate its pledge to no longer provide nuclear assistance to extremist regimes."

 

We are also sending a strong message to other rogue nations, such as Iran and Syria, that we will not hold them to their commitments, even as we give in to their demands," she said.

 

Republican presidential candidate John McCain said he would not support the step unless it is clear North Korea will accept intrusive inspections of its nuclear sites.

 

"I expect the administration to explain exactly how this new verification agreement advances American interests and those of our allies before I will be able to support any decision to remove North Korea from the list of state sponsors of terrorism," he said in a statement late Friday.

 

In addition, he expressed concern that US allies in Asia, particularly Japan, had not been properly consulted. "I am also concerned that this latest agreement appears to have been reached between

Washington and Pyongyang and only then discussed with our Asian allies in an effort to garner their support," he said.

 

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said the decision had been discussed with all the US partners in the six-nation talks - China, Japan, Russia and South Korea - and that a consensus had been reached. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke with her foreign minister colleagues from the four countries on Friday, he said.

 

"North Korea remains subject to numerous sanctions resulting from its 2006 nuclear test, its proliferation activities, its human rights violations and its status as a communist state," McCormack said.

 

"The United States will continue to work toward the

verifiable end of all North Korean nuclear programs and

activities. We will not stop until this work is done."

 

At issue was whether arrangement worked out by Hill and the North Koreans were acceptable to the others .Japan had been resistant, arguing that North Korea should not be taken off the list until the cases of Japanese citizens abducted by Pyongyang in the 1970s and 1980s are resolved.

 

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report

 

 


פרסום ראשון: 10.11.08, 17:38
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