|
N Korea wants
lifting curbs to scrap nukes
Foreign Desk Report
BEIJING—North Korea set out sweeping demands on Monday for scrapping its
nuclear arms and the United States warned that its patience was running
out — an inauspicious start to six-party talks after a year-long hiatus.
Addressing the six-party forum at the first talks since the North’s
October 9 nuclear test, Pyongyang’s chief envoy demanded an end to U.N.
sanctions and U.S. financial curbs and the grant of a nuclear reactor
before it would consider disarmament.
In response to this “exhaustive list,” chief U.S. envoy Christopher Hill
warned that Washington’s patience had “reached its limits.”
North Korea’s opening speech took a “department store approach,”
presenting “an exhaustive list of all its demands” and demanding that
Washington end its “hostile policy” before Pyongyang would agree to rein
in its nuclear programs, a South Korean official told reporters.
But Hill said that North Korea was at a fork in the road and needed to
give ground. “We don’t have the option of walking away from the
problem,” Hill said. “Their future is very much at stake.” “We do need
to see some results,” he said.
A one-on-one meeting expected between the U.S. and North Koreans on
Monday did not take place. Washington, along with host China, South
Korea, Japan and Russia, want to see North Korea take concrete steps to
implement a joint statement agreed in September 2005.
In that statement, North Korea agreed in principle to give up nuclear
weapons in return for aid and security guarantees. But North Korean
chief negotiator Kim Kye-gwan said his country would not consider
implementing the agreement until U.S. and United Nations financial
sanctions on it were lifted, the source said.
Washington imposed its financial curbs more than a year ago after
determining that Pyongyang was engaged in money-laundering and
counterfeiting American currency. The U.N. leveled sanctions in October
after condemning the North’s nuclear test. A separate U.S. Treasury
Department delegation is expected to meet the North Koreans to discuss
the financial standoff. Kim said it was his country’s ultimate goal to
abandon its nuclear programs, but he also demanded the North be provided
with a light-water nuclear reactor to meet its civilian energy needs and
substitute energy aid until the reactor is completed in order for it to
begin doing so, the source said.
Analysts had expected an emboldened North Korea, which now calls itself
a nuclear state, to stake out a tough position and had cautioned that
swift compromise was unlikely.
“The issues to be discussed and addressed by this meeting are complex
and profound, and the tasks borne by all the parties are both glorious
and arduous,” Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei told delegates.
A South Korean official said the North’s tough line was an expected
negotiating position. “They just said what they wanted to say and made
all the demands it can think of,” the official said. |