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- <text id=94TT0017>
- <title>
- Jan. 10, 1994: A Game Of Nuclear Roulette
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NORTH KOREA, Page 28
- A Game Of Nuclear Roulette
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Does Kim Il Sung have the bomb? The mystery deepens as the U.S.
- presses for answers
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> When North Korean and American diplomats emerged after an hour
- of secret negotiations in a basement room at U.N. headquarters
- last week, Pyongyang's ambassador Ho Jong stopped to talk briefly
- with reporters. North Korea, he declared with satisfaction,
- had made some unspecified proposals aimed at resolving the dispute
- over his country's nuclear program.
- </p>
- <p> The next day, a Foreign Ministry official in Pyongyang announced
- that the meeting at the U.N. had "removed a series of stumbling
- blocks" and produced a "breakthrough." Officials in Washington
- said that more details would have to be worked out before they
- could speak of a breakthrough but that the U.S. has "moved closer"
- to its goals. They expect to close a deal soon under which the
- U.S. would call off its annual "Team Spirit" military exercises
- in South Korea, whereafter the North Koreans would allow inspectors
- from the International Atomic Energy Agency to resume routine
- inspections of their seven declared facilities--but not the
- two sites they are trying to keep secret. At the same time,
- the North would begin talks with the South on denuclearization
- of the Korean peninsula.
- </p>
- <p> America is negotiating with deadly seriousness. President Clinton
- has vowed, publicly and unequivocally, that the U.S. will not
- allow the North Koreans to acquire atomic weapons. Whether they
- do or do not already have them profoundly affects how the U.S.
- and all of North Korea's neighbors can and should respond. Pyongyang
- is playing a dangerous form of nuclear roulette. A new study
- by U.S. intelligence agencies has concluded that North Korea
- probably has already built one or two atomic bombs.
- </p>
- <p> If that finding is true, Clinton is on the edge of a major,
- long-term foreign crisis that could make Somalia and Haiti look
- like the small skirmishes they really were. He will have to
- decide how to make good his pledge--not only to keep the North
- Koreans from producing nuclear weapons but also to take away
- any they might have built and hidden. The solutions are neither
- easy nor obvious. Proposals for U.N. economic sanctions probably
- would be blocked in the Security Council by China, Korea's next-door
- neighbor, which considers such pressure unacceptable. Clinton
- might be tempted to use American military power as a last resort,
- but air strikes, for example, could trigger another full-scale
- Korean war, and if the North has a bomb, it is probably hidden.
- That leaves direct, bilateral diplomacy, the course Washington
- intends to keep pursuing. U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali
- tried to help the process along by visiting Pyongyang and Beijing
- over the past two weeks but found North Korean President Kim
- Il Sung and Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen unreceptive
- to a role for the U.N.
- </p>
- <p> But is the new intelligence finding correct? To begin with,
- most recent accounts have made the conclusion sound more certain
- than it really is. The U.S. intelligence community knows very
- little for sure about secretive, Stalinist North Korea. Specifically,
- the U.S. has no hard evidence that Pyongyang's elaborate nuclear
- facilities have produced any bombs. U.S. spy satellites provide
- photographs, infrared images and other reports from space that
- allow Washington to track the general course of Pyongyang's
- nuclear and military programs. Other forms of solid information
- are difficult to come by.
- </p>
- <p> What Washington does know is that the North Koreans have extracted
- some plutonium--the raw material for weapons--from its 5-megawatt
- nuclear power plant at Yongbyon, but the U.S. does not know
- exactly how much. Experts think it could be as much as 12kg
- (26 lbs.), which would be enough for one or two bombs--if
- Pyongyang's engineers are able to build them.
- </p>
- <p> Given the uncertainties, the CIA's new, classified Special National
- Intelligence Estimate does not actually say the North Koreans
- have a couple of bombs. Rather the report concludes there is
- a "somewhat better than even" chance that they have one or two.
- Even so, the Koreans' arsenal is not growing now. In order to
- obtain more plutonium for bombs, the North Koreans would have
- to turn off and cool down the reactor so its fuel rods could
- be removed. Infrared sensors aboard satellites would detect
- any such action. So far, close scrutiny has not revealed any
- recent shutdown.
- </p>
- <p> This is familiar terrain for the experts in Washington, who
- say the main focus of the new intelligence estimate is considerably
- broader: an attempt by the U.S. Government to decide whether
- Pyongyang might ever be persuaded to give up its bomb program.
- The Defense Intelligence Agency took the most pessimistic view
- in the interagency study. Pentagon analysts think the North
- Koreans already have a bomb and are using the negotiations in
- order to buy time to advance their nuclear program.
- </p>
- <p> At the State Department, which leads the U.S. negotiating team,
- the position is that diplomacy might work because North Korea
- has much to gain. State believes Pyongyang might allow international
- safeguards and inspections on all its nuclear installations--even the two waste sites it has been trying to hide--in
- exchange for diplomatic recognition by the U.S., plus trade
- and economic aid from such countries as South Korea and Japan.
- The CIA takes a middle view: that the North Koreans may allow
- inspection of their seven declared facilities but not the two
- undeclared ones. The reason, the agency said in the report,
- was that Pyongyang would want to retain what it already has,
- whether that is plutonium, a couple of bombs or only the nervous
- uncertainty of its neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> Bargaining on these central issues is still only prospective.
- The U.S.-North Korean talks at the U.N. are just a hopeful prelude
- to yet another round of high-level negotiations. The agreement
- Pyongyang and Washington were talking about last week is simply
- a reprise of one made last summer, when Pyongyang told the U.S.
- it would permit routine inspections and resume talks with South
- Korea. The North never fulfilled those promises, and it must
- do so in order to get to the next, third, substantive round
- of talks with the U.S. That is where the key issues are to be
- discussed: diplomatic recognition, trade and aid for North Korea
- in return for ending its atomic weapons program. "This has all
- been shadowboxing," says an official in Washington. "They want
- to hold back as many concessions as they can for the third round,
- and so do we."
- </p>
- <p> None of the players on the U.S. side of the game knows for sure
- whether Pyongyang will make the big concession and halt its
- drive for nuclear weapons. And if it does, the Clinton Administration
- is demanding more: the surrender by the North Koreans of any
- nuclear weapons they have hidden away. Even then the U.S. might
- not offer recognition in return unless Pyongyang is receptive
- to complaints about its human-rights abuses and sales of missiles
- to the Middle East. No matter how the intelligence estimates
- may vary, all the experts agree this is an agenda that will
- be under negotiation for years.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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