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- <text id=94TT0701>
- <title>
- May 30, 1994: North Korea:Pushing It to the Limit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 30, 1994 Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NORTH KOREA, Page 45
- Pushing It to the Limit
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Pyongyang plays games on nuclear inspection and heads closer
- to diplomatic meltdown with Washington
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Jay Peterzell, Mark Thompson and Kenneth R. Timmerman/Washington
- </p>
- <p> After a week of feints, fizzles and frustration, the U.S. seems
- to have averted a diplomatic meltdown--at least temporarily--in its escalating nuclear standoff with North Korea. First,
- Pyongyang exacerbated the 15-month dispute by beginning to remove
- plutonium-rich fuel rods from a nuclear reactor without monitoring
- by the International Atomic Energy Agency--which could enable
- the North to acquire more plutonium for its suspected nuclear
- arms program. The move prompted the IAEA to issue an unusually
- blunt statement accusing Pyongyang of a "serious violation"
- of its commitments under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
- And that effectively catapulted the entire mess back to Bill
- Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> By week's end the President decided to resume high-level talks
- with North Korea, prompted by assurances from the IAEA that
- no fuel had yet been diverted for weapons production and by
- his own realization that a precipitate push for a trade embargo
- against North Korea is the fastest road to a dangerous confrontation.
- Even if sanctions could win approval in the U.N. Security Council--where China has repeatedly stated its opposition--Pyongyang
- has said it will regard the imposition of trade restrictions
- as an act of war, and could retaliate by invading South Korea.
- </p>
- <p> The possibility of another war on the Korean peninsula has forced
- the U.S. to step carefully. The Administration has been equally
- anxious that a nuclear-armed North Korea might touch off an
- atomic-arms race destabilizing all of North Asia. The crisis-a-month
- inspection drama narrows maneuvering room for each of the partners,
- pushing them closer to a showdown. And amid the maddening back
- and forth, there is a disturbing possibility that North Korea
- may be employing the fuel-rod dispute as a smoke screen to disguise
- a second, undeclared source of bombmaking uranium.
- </p>
- <p> Since late April, North Korea has been telling the IAEA that
- it intended to unload fuel rods from its main nuclear reactor
- near the city of Yongbyon. According to Defense Secretary William
- Perry, Yongbyon's estimated 8,000 rods contain enough plutonium
- to build four or five bombs, and inspectors need to see if all
- the fuel is still there. The issue is of critical importance
- because the CIA estimates that fuel rods removed from Yongbyon
- in 1989 provided the plutonium to build one or two nuclear weapons.
- Whether Pyongyang actually has them is impossible to know for
- sure, but scrutiny of the samples would enable the IAEA to discover
- whether some plutonium was spirited away, and if so, how much.
- </p>
- <p> A week after North Korea announced on May 14 that it was going
- ahead with removing the fuel rods, the IAEA sent in a three-man
- inspection team. Last Thursday the observers concluded that
- if the process continued without inspection of the samples,
- it would result in "irreparable loss of the agency's ability
- to verify" that the plutonium-laden fuel was not being diverted
- for weapons use. But by Friday IAEA officials informed Washington
- that none of the disputed fuel has so far been diverted--and
- on Saturday, Pyongyang invited nuclear inspectors to discuss
- plans for additional monitoring.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, Clinton must decide how to cool off the controversy.
- The President is loath to back off: he has already watered down
- his "very firm" declaration of last November that "North Korea
- cannot be allowed to develop a nuclear bomb." Yet Clinton is
- understandably wary of provoking Pyongyang when it comes to
- national security--especially considering the potential for
- confrontation between 35,000 U.S. troops in South Korea and
- North Korea's million-man force just north of the Demilitarized
- Zone.
- </p>
- <p> In Washington some nonproliferation experts think North Korea
- may be pursuing a second clandestine route to nuclear development
- by mining natural uranium and enriching it into weapons-grade
- material. That is the same pathway followed--and nearly completed--by Iraq before its nuclear program was destroyed during the
- Gulf War. "North Korea was an industrial powerhouse in the 1960s,
- and this technology was within their grasp," says Joseph Bermudez,
- who writes for Jane's Intelligence Review. When the U.S. began
- focusing on North Korea as a potential rogue proliferator in
- the 1980s, he says, many of the regime's key uranium-enrichment
- facilities could already have been built and concealed underground.
- If so, concludes Bermudez, current estimates of Pyongyang's
- nuclear capability "could be off by several orders of magnitude."
- Pentagon officials say such an underground program is possible,
- but they have no evidence of one.
- </p>
- <p> The uncertainty surrounding North Korea's nuclear arsenal as
- well as its insistence on impeding international inspectors
- makes it increasingly difficult to believe the optimists in
- the State Department. They argue that North Korea is simply
- using intransigence to bargain for diplomatic recognition, increased
- trade and foreign aid. That analysis could be correct, but it
- is opposed with growing vehemence by officials from the Pentagon
- and the CIA, who last week expressed a mixture of disdain and
- anger at the latest turn of events. Many were not only venting
- ire at Pyongyang's continued stonewalling but also expressing
- a belief that the Clinton Administration must be more resolute.
- "When you're dealing with lunatics like this," said an Air Force
- officer, "you need to present a clear, united front."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-