home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT0487>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1993: War Of Nerves At The Nuclear Brink
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 08, 1993 Cloning Humans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 55
- War Of Nerves At The Nuclear Brink
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The U.S. tries secret talks to seek nuclear compliance from
- North Korea
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. McALLISTER/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Bonnie Angelo/New York and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> During the agonizing negotiations to end the Korean War, the
- American general in charge became so infuriated with the rococo
- delaying tactics of the North Koreans that he asked Washington
- for permission "to employ such language and methods at the talks
- as these treacherous savages cannot fail to understand, and
- understanding, respect." He was turned down. Getting an armistice
- took two more years of an excruciating saraband between envoys
- who may have loathed each other but had too much to lose to
- get mad. Now American and North Korean diplomats are in the
- trenches again, speaking tactfully on matters of life and death,
- as Washington tries to stop Pyongyang's apparent march toward
- building an atomic bomb, and Pyongyang tries to head off the
- international sanctions its ambitions will inevitably prompt.
- </p>
- <p> The dispute is heating up. Hans Blix, head of the International
- Atomic Energy Agency, is expected to tell the U.N. this week
- that North Korea's violation of international nuclear safeguards
- is "continuing and widening." In addition to blocking inspections
- of two secret sites to which the IAEA demanded access last February,
- Pyongyang is now refusing to allow even routine monitoring of
- five declared nuclear sites at Yongbyon, 65 miles north of the
- capital, and two other sites elsewhere. At a 5-MW power reactor
- whose fuel core could be mined for plutonium to make bombs,
- IAEA inspectors are not being allowed to reload spent surveillance
- cameras. Three smaller research facilities due for inspection
- have been off limits since May 1992. A uranium fuel-fabrication
- plant slated for examination every three months has not been
- seen for more than a year. Last August, when IAEA officials
- visited the plutonium-reprocessing plant at Yongbyon, they were
- allowed in only at night, with all the lights turned off, peering
- through the 600-ft. building with what one Western official
- described as "weak flashlights" provided by their hosts. After
- that, says the official, "Blix came back and vowed `never again.'
- They have to allow full inspections with no more horses---."
- </p>
- <p> Blix has the right to refer the dispute to the U.N. Security
- Council, which can punish a nuclear miscreant with sanctions
- that can range from a reprimand to an embargo, and ultimately
- to war. Three weeks ago, he told Washington he would begin the
- process this week if the North didn't start behaving. But the
- West decided to keep negotiating instead. "We're not talking
- in terms of a deadline," says an IAEA spokesman. Reason: fear
- of driving Pyongyang into a corner from which it would fight
- its way out. The North Koreans have threatened to resume plutonium
- reprocessing and their atomic-weapons program if the U.S. breaks
- off talks over the stalled inspections. That threat seems real.
- Even the flashlight search, as well as satellite photos, showed
- the North preparing to resume plutonium reprocessing.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, if an oil or trade embargo is imposed, U.S. analysts
- fear a violent response. Also, Pyongyang diplomats have said
- privately that any attack on their nuclear facilities would
- trigger an invasion of the South. None of these risks of escalation
- are worth taking yet, since Western intelligence analysts are
- fairly sure that the North has only small amounts of plutonium
- and no operational bomb. Further, says a State Department official,
- "none of our main interlocutors on this issue--South Korea,
- Russia, Japan, China--think negotiations have been exhausted."
- </p>
- <p> The first high-level talks between Washington and Pyongyang
- in decades began last June but stalled because of the North's
- foot dragging. To see if they might be rescued, officials have
- held a series of meetings in New York City since September,
- mostly at U.N. headquarters and at least once in a fashionable
- coffee shop. "But there has been no socializing," says one official.
- The U.S. insists that Pyongyang live up to its promises to permit
- formal IAEA inspections and exchange envoys with South Korea
- for more nuclear talks. If it does, Washington will resume formal
- talks and offer some carrots: the possibility of diplomatic
- ties, and even economic aid and investment--tempting to a
- country where many people can afford only one meal a day and
- soap is a luxury.
- </p>
- <p> The talks have been a slog. The North Koreans, superb brinksmen,
- never budge until the last moment. They negotiate with that
- combination of self-righteousness and unblushing bad faith common
- among old-style communist regimes, violating commitments in
- order to sell the same concession two or three times. On the
- American side, a certain admiration has even developed for this
- doggedness. But the atomic clock is ticking. "I think both sides
- are getting tired of going over and over each tiny concession,"
- says one source. "Now that we've gotten to know each other,
- gotten comfortable with each other and gotten to really hate
- each other," he jokes, "I think we are looking for a more comprehensive
- solution to wrap this up."
- </p>
- <p> With stakes so high, comprehensiveness is the right goal. Failure,
- in the worst case, could lead to war. Success could be a first
- step in bringing one of the last troglodyte regimes into the
- modern world.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-