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- <text id=94TT1375>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Diplomacy:Back to Square One
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 51
- Back to Square One
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Clinton could face another showdown as Pyongyang backtracks
- in the nuclear negotiations
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. McAllister/Washington--With reporting by Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo
- </p>
- <p> North Korean diplomats have exasperated Americans since the
- Korean War, when the top U.S. armistice negotiator denounced
- them as "treacherous savages." Last week U.S. diplomats felt
- much the same as the third round of talks in Geneva to halt
- Pyongyang's nuclear-development program not only stalled but
- slid backward.
- </p>
- <p> North Korea's tough-guy bargaining and brazen attempts to retract
- concessions already given were so unyielding that the U.S. asked
- for a recess and recalled its negotiators to Washington for
- consultations. Was the impasse just aggressive brinkmanship
- by the hard men of Pyongyang or the end of the diplomatic opening
- begun in June during Jimmy Carter's visit with North Korean
- strongman Kim Il Sung? The negotiators were not sure, but a
- State Department official was worried that "we're on the brink
- of a serious breach."
- </p>
- <p> Those closest to the talks did all they could to downplay the
- possibility of a rift. "I am not prepared to say that we have
- made substantial progress," said Ambassador Robert Gallucci,
- head of the U.S. delegation, but "the talks were serious and
- businesslike." Both sides strained to say nothing critical of
- the other's position. "It's one of those moments where we try
- not to say anything at all," said a U.S. official. Lower-level
- diplomats continued to meet over the weekend, and Gallucci will
- resume discussions Wednesday with North Korean Vice Foreign
- Minister Kang Sok Ju.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the optimism born of the last talks in August, when the
- U.S. thought it had resolved several key disputes, has dissipated.
- Pyongyang had agreed to replace its suspect gas-graphite reactor
- at Yongbyon and two larger ones under construction with two
- light-water reactors that would generate far less plutonium
- that could be used in bombs. The U.S. had promised its allies
- would pay most of the $4 billion price tag.
- </p>
- <p> In August Kang also agreed that work on the old-style reactors
- would stop as soon as Pyongyang received assurances that the
- new ones were on their way, while the West would provide other
- energy sources during the lengthy construction. But now he insists
- that the North will go on building the old reactors until those
- other sources of energy arrive in the country--and that the
- West should fork over $2 billion in cash to compensate Pyongyang
- for what it has already spent. Contrary to what he said in August,
- he now wants to select which country will supply the new reactors,
- mainly to exclude South Korea, the only country so far willing
- to pay for them.
- </p>
- <p> The most serious backsliding involves the North's willingness
- to accept special inspections by the International Atomic Energy
- Agency at the two sites suspected of containing waste from past
- bomb-building efforts. Gallucci thought Kang had firmly committed
- the North to permit these inspections--crucial to confirming
- whether Pyongyang already has obtained plutonium to make bombs--before any components for the new reactors arrived. But this
- week Kang insisted the North would never permit special inspections,
- and would only start talking to the IAEA about its past nuclear
- program once the new reactors were more than 50% complete. Kang
- also said his government intended to keep the plutonium-rich
- fuel rods it removed from the Yongbyon reactor last May in North
- Korea instead of shipping them abroad.
- </p>
- <p> In an ominous new threat, he said Pyongyang wanted to insert
- new fuel rods into the reactor now, so it can generate more
- plutonium. While there is no sign the North has actually started
- refueling, Gallucci told Kang any attempt to do so would end
- all talks.
- </p>
- <p> Others who have negotiated with the North say its shifts of
- direction are nothing new. "They like to set the bar higher
- and higher," said a Japanese diplomat, whose country engaged
- in eight rounds of talks to normalize relations with the North
- before they broke down. A Washington official adds, "It's not
- unusual for them, having pocketed what you put on the table
- in the last round, to retract their concessions."
- </p>
- <p> The current impasse may also be dictated by uncertainty in Pyongyang.
- Donald Gregg, former U.S. ambassador to Seoul, suggests that
- Kim Jong Il "is asking for the world, because he has seen how
- highly we value his nuclear program." Other experts speculate
- that Pyongyang's intransigence reflects the growing strength
- of hard-liners, or that Kang is simply stalling until the succession
- to Kim Il Sung is settled. They note that the younger Kim has
- still not been formally named President or party chief. Jimmy
- Carter, who is pressing to return to Pyongyang to arrange a
- summit between North and South Korea, is holding off until Kim's
- ascendancy is assured. That could come mid-month, at the end
- of a 100-day mourning period for his father.
- </p>
- <p> Washington can afford to wait a few weeks. IAEA inspectors note
- that North Korea is finally taking better care of the fuel rods
- removed from the Yongbyon reactor; they can remain safely in
- their cooling ponds for several more months under present conditions
- and much longer if the water quality is improved. Bill Clinton
- has no interest in encouraging another big international crisis
- while American troops are deployed in Haiti. But the fear that
- Pyongyang is just buying time while it builds secret bombs weighs
- more heavily than ever on many minds in Washington. Clinton
- will need real results soon to prove that talking nicely with
- Pyongyang is a smart strategy.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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