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2008/09/29 |
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Hill also will consult with other members of the Six-Party Talks
Washington ?Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill is headed to North Korea and other parts of the region for consultations over North Korea’s plans to restart its nuclear weapons development facility at Yongbyon.
“Obviously, we’re very concerned about some of the reversal of disablement activities that the North has been engaged in, and he [Ambassador Hill] obviously wants to consult with his counterparts in the region out there to see what our next steps are going to be with regard to a response to what the North is doing,?deputy State Department spokesman Robert Wood said September 29.
Hill, who is the chief U.S. negotiator to the Six-Party Talks, will arrive in Seoul, South Korea, September 30 to meet with South Korea’s chief nuclear envoy, Kim Sook. “Later in the week he’ll visit Pyongyang before going to Beijing, where he’ll meet with the Chinese Vice Foreign Minister, Wu Dawei,?Wood said.
Hill, who is assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, also will meet with the Japanese Foreign Ministry’s Akitaka Saiki, director-general of the ministry’s Bureau of Asian and Oceanic Affairs.
The Six-Party Talks, which are intended to stabilize the Korean Peninsula and to convince North Korea to give up its plans to develop nuclear weapons, include China ?which hosts the talks ?Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Russia and the United States.
North Korea announced in August that it was stopping the dismantlement of its Yongbyon nuclear reprocessing facility. On September 22, North Korea asked the International Atomic Energy Agency to remove seals and surveillance cameras from the Yongbyon facility, IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei said at a board of governors meeting in Vienna, Austria.
North Korea began disabling its nuclear program in exchange for humanitarian aid and security guarantees. The government provided a June 26 report detailing its past nuclear activity and demolished the main cooling tower at the Yongbyon nuclear complex, where it claimed to have produced 37 kilograms of plutonium for its nuclear weapons, such as the device it tested in October 2006.
As an added part of the incentive package, the United States had agreed to remove North Korea from its list of state sponsors of terrorism if the government would submit a verification plan meeting Six-Party Talks demands. The possible removal from the state sponsors list, which is maintained by the State Department, is part of incentives that include various forms of economic assistance and trade, and the lifting of sanctions that accompany placement on the terrorism list.
“We encourage the North very strongly to submit to have a verification regime so that we can move forward on the other aspects of the six-party framework,?Wood said at a State Department briefing. “And Assistant Secretary Hill will be obviously out in the region looking for ways to work with our allies to bring North Korea into compliance with its obligation.?
Wood said Hill is going to North Korea for two strategic purposes: to get a sense of what the North Koreans are doing and why, and to convince them to submit a verification package. The type of verification package being sought is similar to those from other nations and is designed to comply with international nuclear nonproliferation accords, he said.
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