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N Korea may accept incentives to disarm
Foreign Desk Report
SEOUL (South Korea)—South Korea’s nuclear envoy said Tuesday that North
Korea could be persuaded to disarm with strong incentives to help
reverse its economic crisis, while China called for flexibility at
revived arms talks it is hosting. In Tokyo, Japanese Foreign Minister
Taro Aso said North Korea would have to submit to inspections by the
U.N. atomic watchdog to eventually prove it had completed its
denuclearization.
“Without the proof, we cannot easily trust that they abandoned the
plan,” he said. North Korea confirmed its participation at the
six-nation nuclear talks, which include the United States, both Koreas,
Russia, Japan and China, and are set to convene Monday in Beijing.
“The talks will be held next week, but it is the moment to watch” how
talks develop, Yonhap news agency quoted Kim Myong Gil, a minister for
North Korea’s mission to the United Nations in New York, as saying. He
did not elaborate. The nuclear talks have been on hold since November
2005, with the North refusing to attend in protest at U.S. financial
restrictions imposed over Pyongyang’s alleged complicity in
money-laundering and counterfeiting of U.S. dollars.
Since then, the North has tested a new long-range missile and its first
nuclear weapon — adding impetus to international efforts seeking its
denuclearization. So far, the talks have failed to yield any progress.
In Beijing on Tuesday, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said
Beijing hopes participants should “show flexibility and a pragmatic
attitude and take concrete steps to achieve positive results.” South
Korea’s nuclear negotiator Chun Yung-woo said in Seoul at a closed
academic forum Tuesday that the North realizes it needs outside
assistance to end its deep economic decline, which has led to shortages
and famine for its people.
“I believe they may be interested in a trade-off between nuclear
capabilities and economic rehabilitation,” he said, according to a pool
report. “How far and how fast North Korea can be made to move forward
depends primarily on the extent to which the five other parties are
willing to give in return for North Korea’s actions.” Last month,
Washington offered North Korea specific details about the kind of
economic and energy assistance it would receive in exchange for shutting
down its nuclear facilities, although no details have been made public.
It is not clear how the North has responded. |