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Six-party talks on North Koreas nuclear program in deadlock
By John Chan and Peter Symonds
13 August 2005
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Six-party negotiations on North Koreas nuclear program
broke up last weekend without any resolution or official communiqué.
In order to avoid a complete collapse of the round, the partiesthe
US, China, Japan, Russia and the two Koreasagreed to resume
discussions in the week beginning August 29.
After protracted talks in Beijing lasting 13 days, the gulf
between the US and North Korea remained as deep as at the start.
Washington demands that Pyongyang dismantle all nuclear programsincluding
those for peaceful purposesbefore it will agree to any economic
and political concessions. North Korea insists that its right
to civilian nuclear power reactors be part of any final agreement.
In the course of the negotiations, Beijing, as the host, drew
up four drafts of a basic statement of agreed principles, which
included the de-nuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula and the
normalisation of diplomatic relations between the US and North
Korea. The latter proviso is part of longstanding North Korean
demands for an end to the US diplomatic and economic embargo,
dating back half a century to the Korean War.
Top US envoy Christopher Hill described the draft statement
in glowing terms. This package would virtually solve their
energy problems. It would address many of their economic problems.
It would address normalisation with the international community,
including bilateral normalisation. Its very generous package,
he declared.
In the lead up to the talks, South Korea offered to provide
the North with extensive aid. The package, dubbed the North Korean
Marshall Plan, would provide at least $US1.4 billion in infrastructure
and an additional $1 billion annually, beginning in 2008, in the
form of 2,000 megawatts of power.
There is no doubt that North Korea is under pressure to accede.
Having been economically and politically isolated by Washington,
the country is in deep economic crisis and faces severe shortages
of energy and basic goods, including food. Pyongyangs only
formal ally, China, is pushing it to accept the US deal, as a
means of preventing a nuclear arms race in the region and to curry
favour with Washington.
To agree to the package, however, would leave North Korea completely
dependent on foreign energy supplies and vulnerable to future
US threats and provocations. In 2002, US President George Bush
branded North Korea, along with Iraq and Iran, as an axis
of evil, and a leaked Pentagon report identified North Korea
as a US nuclear target.
Three previous rounds of talks, which began in 2003, broke
up in acrimony. At the last round in June 2004, the US placed
a similar package on the table. In February, Pyongyang claimed
for the first time that it had manufactured nukes for self-defence
and was suspending any involvement in talks indefinitely. Since
then, Washington, with the assistance of Beijing in particular,
has pressured North Korea, including with the threat of action
by the UN Security Council, to return to talks.
The US made a significant shift in its formal approach to the
latest talks. In the past, it has refused to engage in bilateral
discussions, insisting on multilateral talks in order to enlist
the other four countries in forcing North Korea to bow to US demands.
Right-wing Republicans in the US condemned the previous Clinton
administration for negotiating the 1994 Agreed Framework with
Pyongyang to freeze its nuclear programs. The Bush administration
declared repeatedly that it would not bow to blackmail
or reward bad behaviour by North Korea.
Before the latest round, the White House shelved its ritual
denunciations of Pyongyang and its leader Kim Jong Il. In Beijing,
lengthy direct discussions took place between the US and North
Korean negotiating teams and the round itself was a marathon compared
to the previous three. At the conclusion, US envoy Hill emphasised
that further talks at the end of the month could produce a breakthrough.
The change in tone does not represent an abandonment of Washingtons
aggressive attitude toward North Korea, but rather is purely tactical.
In alliance with the so-called EU-3 (Britain, France and Germany),
the Bush administration has this week provoked a sharp confrontation
with Iran over its nuclear programs. In these conditions, it appears
that Washington wants to put North Korea on the backburner, at
least for the short-term.
American hypocrisy
The marked difference in the current US stance toward Iran
and North Korea underscores the hypocritical and self-serving
character of Washingtons arguments.
North Korea quit the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT)
in 2002 after the US provocatively accused it of having a secret
uranium enrichment program and halted fuel oil supplies provided
under the 1994 Agreed Framework. Pyongyang has since expelled
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors, restarted
its small research reactor and claims to have reprocessed spent
fuel rods and built nuclear weapons. Yet, Washington has dismissed
these claims as mere rhetoric and is currently negotiating with
Pyongyang.
Iran, on the other hand, remains covered by the NPT and insists
that its nuclear programs relate to plans for a nuclear power
industry. While insisting on its right under the NPT to develop
uranium enrichment, Tehran has bowed to US and European demands
for more and more intrusive inspections of its nuclear facilities.
Without any evidence, Washington routinely declares that Iran
is seeking to build nuclear weapons. In response to Irans
decision this week to restart uranium conversion at its Esfahan
plant, the US is demanding that Iran be referred to the UN Security
Council for possible sanctions.
The obvious contradictions in the Bush administrations
attitude to the two countries simply underscores the fact its
policies are determined solely by US strategic and economic interests.
Both the Middle East and North East Asia are key elements of US
aims to establish dominance over its rivals. If Washington is
giving Iran a higher priority at present, it is in large part
because of the military disaster it confronts in Iraq. At the
very least, the US is seeking to bully Iran, and indirectly other
regional countries, into playing a greater role in crushing the
growing insurgency in Iraq against the illegal US-led occupation
of the country.
The two-faced character of US policy toward both Iran and North
Korea is further highlighted by the fact that Washington takes
an entirely different approach to other countries that have either
refused to sign the NPT, such as US allies Israel and India, or
have breached its provisions. Last year South Korea, for instance,
was forced to admit that it had conducted secret uranium enrichment
experiments, as recently as 2000, yet the matter was swept under
the carpet without even a hint of condemnation, let alone UN sanctions.
If Iran and North Korea have been singled out for special treatment,
it is because the US regards them as potential military targets
and wants to ensure they are incapable of offering any resistance.
Whether or not the outline of a deal is agreed when the six-party
talks resume later this month remains to be seen. The US claimed
to have the agreement of all countries except North Korea to the
final draft statement of principles. US envoy Hill blamed Pyongyang
for blocking agreement by insisting on its right to build civilian
power reactors.
This week, however, signs of open disagreement between the
US and its ally South Korea emerged. South Koreas Unification
Minister Chung Dong-young indicated on Thursday that his country
would oppose the US demand that North Korea ends all nuclear programs.
We believe that the North has the right to use nuclear technology
for peaceful purposes, such as for agriculture and medical use
and for generating electricity, he said.
The South Korean government is deeply concerned that another
breakdown of talks and a diplomatic crisis will cut directly across
its so-called Sunshine Policy to open up North Korea as a source
of cheap labour and a transit route to China, Russia and beyond.
While opposed to North Korea acquiring nuclear weapons, Seoul
fears that US bellicosity has the potential to provoke military
conflict on the peninsula.
On the day before Chungs statement, US envoy Hill definitively
ruled out allowing North Korea to build nuclear power reactors,
declaring it is simply not on the table. The following
day, US officials dismissed the possibility of a rift with South
Korea. Chungs comments make clear, however, that the outcome
of American efforts to browbeat not only North Korea, but other
parties to the negotiations, is by no means certain.
If the round of talks does break up without any agreement,
tensions are likely to escalate as the Bush administration seeks
to take punitive action against North Korea.
See Also:
US and European allies provoke confrontation
with Iran
[11 August 2005]
Bush administration intensifies
pressure on North Korea
[8 June 2005]
North Korea pulls out of nuclear
talks
[14 February 2005]
South Korea admits
to carrying out secret nuclear experiments
[6 September 2004]
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