Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Chinese Online Class - US, N.Korea to talk under nuclear deal

WORLD / America

US, N.Korea to talk under nuclear deal

(Reuters)
Updated: 2007-03-05 16:55

North Korea's Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan (R) leaves his hotel in
New York March 4, 2007. North Korea is fully prepared to shut down its
nuclear facilities and allow inspections, a South Korean official said in
New York, where envoys from Pyongyang and Washington are set to begin
rare talks on improving ties. [Reuters]

NEW YORK - US and North Korean negotiators will start talks on Monday
aimed at normalizing diplomatic ties as part of a complex agreement under
which Pyongyang has pledged to scrap its nuclear arms programs for aid.

The talks at the US mission to the United Nations mark the highest-level
meeting on American soil since North Korea's leader Kim Jong-il sent a
top envoy to Washington in 2000 in an abortive effort to improve
relations.

North Korean envoy Kim Kye-gwan will meet his American counterpart,
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, to begin resolving
problems between two countries that have been bitter foes since the
1950-53 Korean War.

"This is the beginning of the implementation of the agreement of a couple
of weeks ago," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Friday.

Issues to be discussed include the US designation of North Korea as a
state sponsor of terrorism and American trade sanctions against the North
under the Trading with the Enemy Act, the State Department said.

WORKING GROUP PHASE

The United States will seek North Korea's assurances that it is committed
to following through on an agreement to shut down within 60 days its main
nuclear facility and allow inspectors in return for 50,000 tons of fuel
oil.

"They certainly will have to tell Hill what are they doing, what is the
timetable, and the results of that will indicate how far and how fast
this process is going to move," said Don Oberdorfer, a Korea expert at
Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies.

The New York meeting is part of the first stage in implementing the
February 13 deal reached in Beijing by the two Koreas, the United States,
Japan, Russia and China after three years of talks that were punctuated
by a North Korean nuclear test last October.

Further steps to fully "disable" North Korea's nuclear weapons program
will gain North Korea another 950,000 tons of oil or other forms of aid
of equivalent value.

Before the next round of six-party nuclear talks on March 19, North Korea
is set to hold discussions with Japan in Hanoi, as well as separate
meetings on energy aid, the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula and
regional security.

A senior South Korean official who met Kim Kye-gwan in New York on
Saturday was quoted by media in Seoul as saying North Korea intended to
"fully do its part" to implement the initial steps of the February 13
agreement.

The United States is removing stumbling blocks by acknowledging doubts
about what it knows of a secret North Korean uranium enrichment program
that triggered the nuclear dispute, analysts said.

Washington is also preparing to release millions of dollars in North
Korean funds that were frozen due to suspicions of money laundering and
counterfeiting, US officials said.

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