North Korea Quits NPT, Says It Will Restart Nuclear Facilities
In a provocative decision, North Korea announced December 12 that
it was restarting nuclear facilities that had been frozen since
1994, and it ordered international monitors to leave the country.
As international concern grew that Pyongyang was resuming its nuclear
weapons program, North Korea announced January 10 that it was immediately
withdrawing from the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT).
In response to North Koreas actions, the Bush administrations
policy has been shifting. After initially refusing to meet officially
with North Korea, Washington is now saying that it is open to talks
but not formal negotiations.
North Koreas nuclear facilitiesa small, plutonium-producing
reactor, a fuel-rod fabrication plant, a reprocessing plant, and
two partially completed larger reactorshad been frozen by
the 1994 Agreed Framework with the United States. That agreement
was concluded after a tense standoff following the International
Atomic Energy Agencys (IAEA) discovery that Pyongyang had
been diverting spent fuel from the reactor for a nuclear weapons
program.
Under the Agreed Framework, the United States agreed to provide
two proliferation-resistant reactors and to supply 500,000 metric
tons of heating oil each year to North Korea while the reactors
were under construction. The IAEA was charged with monitoring the
freeze on North Koreas nuclear facilities.
The United States and the IAEA have expressed concern about the
consequences of North Korea reviving its nuclear facilities. A November
27 Congressional Research Service report states that the reactor
could produce a sufficient amount of plutonium for one bomb annually,
and the CIA states in a 2002 report to Congress that the spent fuel
rods contain enough plutonium for several more weapons.
Whether North Korea already possesses nuclear weapons is unclear.
A State Department official interviewed January 3 said that the
U.S. intelligence community believes North Korea has already produced
one or two nuclear weapons from plutonium produced before the Agreed
Framework. But publicly the CIA says only that Pyongyang has
produced enough plutonium for one or two weapons.
The Freeze Ends
The crisis started in October when, after being confronted by a
U.S. delegation, North Korea allegedly admitted that it had a uranium-enrichment
program in violation of several agreements meant to prevent Pyongyang
from developing nuclear weapons. However, North Korea has denied
it said this. A November 27 Korean Central Broadcasting Station
broadcast cited by Agence France-Presse termed the U.S. charge a
fabrication, adding that it actually told the U.S. delegation
that it is entitled to possess nuclear weapons if the United
States violates their nuclear agreement.
In response, the Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization
(KEDO), the U.S.-led consortium responsible for implementing the
Agreed Framework, announced November 14 that it would suspend fuel
oil deliveries to North Korea.
The situation escalated when Pyongyang sent a December 12 letter
to Mohamed ElBaradei, the head of the IAEA, stating that North Korea
had decided to resume operations of the facilities governed by the
Agreed Framework. The letter requested that the agency remove seals
and monitoring equipment, which are used to ensure compliance with
the agreement, from all the facilities.
Through the countrys official Korean Central News Agency
(KCNA), a North Korean spokesman said December 12 that it was restarting
the reactor in order to generate electricity and indicated that
the United States had violated the Agreed Framework. It cited the
KEDO decision and the fact that President George W. Bush had called
North Korea part of an axis of evil. The spokesman also
accused Washington of targeting North Korea for a preemptive
nuclear attack.
In September, the Bush administration released a report which emphasizes
pre-emptively attacking countries developing weapons of mass destruction.
It explicitly mentions North Korea. In addition, a leaked version
of the Bush administrations January 2002 classified Nuclear
Posture Review lists North Korea as a country against which the
United States should be prepared to use nuclear weapons, but it
does not mention pre-emptive nuclear strikes. The Agreed Framework
requires the United States to provide formal assurances to
[North Korea] against the threat or use of nuclear weapons.
In a December 12 letter, ElBaradei asked Pyongyang not to remove
the agencys equipment, but December 14 North Korea replied
that the freeze was a matter between the United States and North
Korea and not pursuant to any agreement with the IAEA.
The letter stated that North Korea would take unilateral action
to remove seals and monitoring cameras if the IAEA did not act.
North Korea proceeded to make good on its threat. Between December
22 and 24, it cut all seals and disrupted surveillance equipment
on the reactor, its spent fuel pond, the fuel reprocessing plant,
and the nuclear scrap and equipment at the fuel fabrication
plant, according to a December 30 IAEA report. IAEA spokesman Mark
Gwozdecky said in a December 26 Agence France-Presse article that
North Korea has begun moving fresh fuel rods into the reactor. According
to the IAEA report, North Korea has said it will restart its reactor
in one to two months.
Then, on December 27, Pyongyang ordered the IAEA inspectors out
of the country. When ElBaradei protested in a letter that day, North
Korea simply reiterated its demand. The IAEA inspectors left the
country December 31, according to the IAEA Web site.
On January 10, North Korea increased tensions by announcing its
withdrawal from the NPT. Its statement, however, says that Pyongyang
has no intention to produce nuclear weapons
at this stage.
Although the NPT requires a three months notice if a party
is to withdraw, North Korea says its withdrawal is immediate. North
Korea withdrew from the treaty in 1993 but suspended its withdrawal
just before it was to take effect after reaching an agreement with
the United States.
U.S. Reaction
In its December 12 statement, North Korea said that any decision
to refreeze the facilities depends entirely
on
the attitude of the United States, but Washingtons response
has been in flux and remains unclear.
Initially, the United States maintained it would not engage in
formal talks or negotiate with North Korea until it agreed to give
up its prohibited nuclear programs. But a meeting of the Trilateral
Coordination and Oversight Group (TCOG)a consultative body
consisting of the United States, Japan, and South Koreaproduced
a statement January 7 saying the United States is now willing
to talk to North Korea about how it will meet its obligations to
the international community. The statement emphasizes, however,
that Washington will not provide quid pro quos to North Korea
to live up to its existing obligations.
Pyongyang has not responded to the U.S. offer for talks, a State
Department official said in a January 9 interview.
The TCOG statement also repeated that Washington has no intention
of invading North Korea. U.S. officials have reiterated several
times Bushs 2002 statement in Seoul saying that Washington
has no intention of attacking North Korea. Its inclusion in a written
statement, however, is widely viewed as a more formal commitment.
North Korea has continued to call on the United States to sign
a non-aggression treaty with Pyongyang in order to resolve
the current situation. North Koreas statement announcing its
withdrawal from the NPT, however, suggested a softening in this
position. It indicated that it might halt its nuclear activities
if the United States drops its hostile policy to stifle
North Korealanguage suggesting that North Korea might want
KEDO to resume fuel oil shipments.
The State Department official would not clarify what the United
States would ask of North Korea or what form any talks would take.
White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer said in a January 8 statement
that the renewal of fuel oil shipments or a nonaggression pact would
not be part of discussions.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said in a January 7
press briefing that Washington expects Pyongyang to dismantle its
uranium-enrichment program. However, the State Department official
would not discuss the U.S. position on North Koreas decision
to restart its frozen reactor, except to say that North Korea should
not be producing nuclear weapons.
It is unclear under what conditions Washington would agree to negotiate
with Pyongyang. Boucher stated January 3 that North Korea must verifiably
and visibly dismantle its nuclear programs before Washington
will enter into negotiations, but a White House official interviewed
January 6 would not say what the United States would do if North
Korea complies with its demands. State Department and White House
officials statements after the TCOG meeting did not clarify
the issue.
Since June 2001, the Bush administration has linked meetings with
Pyongyang to discuss missiles and nuclear weapons with other issues,
including conventional forces and the countrys human rights
record. Boucher said in his January 7 statement that these issues
are still on the table and
need to be addressed in the
context of any improvement in relations.
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, however, suggested in a January
9 Washington Post interview that there might be room for
negotiation with North Korea, saying, thats what diplomacy
is about when asked about prospects for meeting North Koreas
request for a nonaggression pact.
Boucher said in a December 13 statement that Washington was talking
with other governments about ways to bring diplomatic
pressure on North Korea. State Department spokesman Philip
Reeker said December 30 that the United States would not necessarily
apply sanctions. The pressure comes from Pyongyang being
forced to forego the benefits of future diplomatic and economic
engagement with the international community, according to a State
Department official in a January 3 interview.
International Reaction
Meanwhile, the IAEA Board of Governors adopted a resolution January
6 condemning North Koreas decision to restart its nuclear
reactor and related facilities in violation of the 1994 Agreed Framework.
The resolution deplores North Koreas action in
the strongest terms and calls on Pyongyang to meet immediately,
as a first step with IAEA officials. It also calls on North
Korea to re-establish the seals and monitoring equipment it dismantled,
to comply fully with agency safeguards, to clarify details about
its reported uranium-enrichment program, and to allow the agency
to verify that all its nuclear material is declared and
subject
to safeguards.
ElBaradei said during a January 6 interview on The Newshour
with Jim Lehrer that North Korea must respond to the IAEA within
weeks. If the country fails to do so, the IAEA will report the matter
to the UN Security Council, he said. Boucher said January 6, however,
that it is unclear whether the council will become involved.
Pyongyang condemned the IAEA resolution when it announced its withdrawal
from the NPT, calling it a grave encroachment upon [its] sovereignty.
The IAEA had already adopted a resolution November 29 that called
upon North Korea to clarify its reported uranium-enrichment
program. North Korea rejected the resolution, saying the IAEAs
position is biased in favor of the United States.
Although the international community unanimously condemned Pyongyangs
actions, there was less agreement on a solution. Most U.S. allies
have come out in favor of dialogue with North Korea. South Korean
President Kim Dae-jung argued against isolating North Korea or placing
economic sanctions on them, Reuters reported December 30. South
Korean President-elect Roh Moo-hyun expressed a similar view the
next day, according to a December 31 AFX News report.
Japan has strongly condemned North Koreas actions, but its
Foreign Ministry said in a January 7 statement that direct
channels are still open between Tokyo and Pyongyang. The two
countries had agreed in September to hold normalization talks, but
the talks have been stalled since late October over North Koreas
weapons program and its earlier kidnappings of Japanese citizens.
Although the TCOG statement says that Pyongyangs relations
with the
international community hinge on its compliance
with the statements disarmament demands, it also highlights
the value of Japan and South Koreas bilateral dialogues with
Pyongyang, referring to them as important channels to resolve
issues of bilateral concern.
Russia and China have said they favor dialogue between the relevant
parties, although both have criticized North Koreas decision
to resume operations at its nuclear facilities.
A January 5 statement from KCNA warned against the involvement
of other countries, saying that the situation on the Korean
Peninsula will be pushed to a phase of crisis if they join
with Washington in putting pressure on North Korea.
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