Thursday, March 27, 2008

Learn Chinese - Richardson sees N.Korea set for nuclear deal

WORLD / Asia-Pacific

Richardson sees N.Korea set for nuclear deal

(Reuters/AP)
Updated: 2007-04-09 13:31

U.S. presidential candidate and governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson,
center, poses with his delegation members on arrival at an airport in
Pyongyang, North Korea Sunday, April 8, 2007. The four-day trip that
started Sunday with the endorsement of the administration of U.S.
President George W. Bush comes days before a crucial deadline in a recent
nuclear disarmament accord. [AP]

WASHINGTON - New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, leading a U.S. delegation
on a visit to North Korea, said he believed Pyongyang was ready to end
its nuclear weapons program and improve relations with the United States,
NBC Nightly News reported on Sunday.

Richardson's delegation arrived ahead of an April 14 deadline for North
Korea to begin dismantling its nuclear program under an agreement in
six-party talks with the United States, South Korea, Japan, Russia and
China.

Special coverage:
North Korea Nuclear Issue 
Related readings:
US, DPRK 'reach deal on frozen funds'
N.Korea plans to close nuke facility
N.Korea insists US unfreeze $25m
Dispute over N.Korea funds may be over
Nuke disarmament complex: IAEA
DPRK 'committed' to disarmament pact

"I believe for the first time they do want to enter into an agreement
with the six-party countries and they want a better relationship with the
United States," Richardson told NBC.

"They know that the key is dismantling their nuclear weapons."

Richardson's delegation is on a mission to oversee the return of remains
of American soldiers from the Korean War but many hope to get a sense of
the reclusive communist country's thinking about the nuclear issue during
the visit.

The Bush administration's top Korea expert, Victor Cha of the National
Security Council, is part of the U.S. delegation, signaling a willingness
by the White House to engage the North Koreans if they reciprocate, NBC
said.

Richardson, a Democratic presidential candidate and former U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations, visited North Korea in the 1990s and in
2005.

Although North Korea invited Richardson alone, the White House joined the
trip partly to make sure he did not deviate from official U.S. policy,
NBC said.

Willing to allow UN inspections

North Korea's top nuclear negotiator told U.S. envoys Monday that his
government would immediately invite U.N. nuclear inspectors into the
country if US$25 million in disputed North Korean funds are released to
Pyongyang.

North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan met with Bill Richardson
and Anthony Principi, U.S. President George W. Bush's former veteran
affairs secretary, who were visiting Pyongyang.

Kim "indicated that the North Korean government would invite the ...
inspectors back the moment the funds are released to the North Korean
government," Principi told reporters after the meeting.

Kim also told the U.S. delegation of the difficulty of shutting down its
main nuclear reactor by a Saturday deadline called for in a February
nuclear disarmament accord, he said.

"They can make a beginning, but whether they can completely shut down a
nuclear reactor in such a short time would be very difficult," Principi
said.

There has been little progress in implementing the landmark February 13
nuclear agreement in which North Korea promised to take initial steps
toward dismantling its nuclear program, including closing its main
nuclear reactor and providing a full list of its nuclear facilities.

North Korea has refused to move forward due to the delayed transfer of
US$25 million frozen by Macau authorities after the U.S. blacklisted a
bank in that Chinese administrative region in 2005 for allegedly helping
Pyongyang launder money.

Last week, the State Department said that a hitch stalling the release of
the funds had been resolved, potentially clearing the way for the
disbursement of the money. No details were released on when or how the
money would be transferred.

Richardson said his delegation pushed Kim for a show of good faith that
North Korea was ready to move forward in it obligations under the
February 13 deal. He said the U.S. side asked for a meeting of the
six-nations involved in nuclear disarmament talks before Saturday, when
Pyongyang is supposed to shut down its nuclear reactor and let in U.N.
nuclear inspectors.

"Our negotiators are ready to meet with the North Koreans immediately so
that this effort to dismantle their nuclear weapons is concluded,"
Richardson said.

Reporters were allowed to view the first minutes of the meeting. Kim said
that the visit was the first one that included both Democratic and
Republican American officials since Bush took office.

"In light of current international relations and DPRK-US relations, your
current visit to our country is of very great significance," Kim said
through an interpreter.

As the officials met, hundreds of children and women in brightly colored
traditional Korean dresses practiced dances that they will perform on
Sunday, when North Koreans celebrate the 95th anniversary of the birth of
Kim Il Sung, the country's founding president and the father of current
leader Kim Jong Il.

Richardson has regularly made diplomatic trips, often on his own
initiative, to a number of global hot spots. Though visits to North Korea
by senior U.S. officials are rare, this was Richardson's sixth.

He said the timing of his visit is important and will show North Korea
the United States' good intentions.

Richardson's group is expected to oversee the transfer of remains from
the North Korean army to U.N. personnel.

On Wednesday, the delegation plans to drive from Pyongyang to South
Korea, hopefully with the U.S. remains.

Top World News 

� Abe meets Bush, renews sympathy for 'comfort women'

� Bombers strike at Iraqi army, civilians

� Putin firm in final union address

� US House OKs Iraq troop pullout bill

� Japanese PM to meet Bush in summit

Today's Top News 

� China to act on pollution, warming gases

� Yang a popular choice as FM

� Hu, Lien stress cross-Straits peace

� US captures senior Al-Qaida operative

� Yang Jiechi named new FM, replacing Li Zhaoxing

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments: