 |
Arms Control Association Condemns North Korean Nuclear Test
Threat; Experts Call for More Effective, Energetic U.S. Diplomacy
For Immediate Release: October 4, 2006
Press Contacts: Paul
Kerr, (202) 463-8270 x102; Daryl
G. Kimball, (202) 463-8270 x107
(Washington, D.C.) A day after North Korea's foreign ministry released a statement
threatening that Pyongyang would conduct a nuclear test explosion at some point
in the future, experts from the nonpartisan Arms Control Association called
for more energetic U.S. and international diplomacy to prevent a further escalation
of the long-running impasse over North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
"North Korea's threat of a nuclear weapon test explosion is out of bounds
and extremely counterproductive," said Daryl G. Kimball, executive director
of the Arms Control Association.
"At the same time, North Korea's nuclear test threat underscores
that current policies designed to curb its nuclear weapons program have failed
to achieve their potential and that a new and more energetic diplomatic approach
is needed, and fast," Kimball said.
A little more than one year ago, six countries, including North Korea, agreed
to a comprehensive joint statement stipulating goals and principles for a step-by-step,
action-for-action plan to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula in a verifiable manner
and move toward normalized relations. Even before North Korea's
nuclear test threat, the six-party process was near collapse due to inflexibility
and inaction on the part of leaders in Pyongyang and in Washington. No
follow-up talks are currently scheduled among the six participants: China, Japan,
Russia, South Korea, the United States, and North Korea.
"A dangerous situation has been allowed to get worse. It is essential that
top U.S. diplomats clarify Washington's willingness to negotiate directly with
their North Korean counterparts in the context of the six-party process or other
fora to implement the September 2005 Joint Framework Agreement for the denuclearization
of the Korean Peninsula," suggested Amb. Robert Gallucci, a member of the
ACA Board of Directors.
Since November 2005, Washington and Pyongyang have been at odds over the substance
and sequencing of the steps outlined in the Joint Framework. Pyongyang blames
the breakdown mainly on U.S. efforts to crack down on illicit North Korean financial
transactions and extract concessions in the six-party talks. The United States
says it must take action against money laundering and that Pyongyang's complaints
are but a cynical excuse to avoid returning to the six-party talks. In July,
North Korea test-fired several ballistic missiles and the United States and Japan
responded by pushing a resolution (1695) through the UN Security Council
that, among other things, calls on North Korea to return to six-party talks.
"The six-party negotiations have not worked because there have been no real
negotiations. Bilateral talks were a good idea before North Korea's test threat
and they could still help jumpstart the process and lead to a de-escalation of
tensions," Gallucci said. "Concerns that this approach would undermine
the role of regional players, including South Korea, Japan, China, and Russia,
are misplaced because these states would be regularly consulted by Washington," he
noted.
Late last month, U.S. Ambassador to South Korea Alexander Vershbow indicated
a slight shift in the U.S. position on resuming talks. In an interview with Yonhap
News Agency Vershbow said there was a possibility for a face-to-face meeting
between U.S. and North Korean negotiators to resolve the nuclear crisis if North
Korea would also agree to return to the six-party talks.
"Clearly, it is far less likely that talks on the nuclear issue will produce
useful results if the North maintains its threat to test a nuclear weapon. At
the same time, it is unlikely that the situation will improve if Washington insists
the six-party process is the only path forward," added Gallucci, who was
the U.S. negotiator during the first North Korean nuclear crisis from 1993-1994.
That earlier crisis was resolved through direct talks with North Korea and led
to the 1994 Agreed Framework, under which North Korea verifiably halted
plutonium production through 2002.
"It is more important than ever for President Bush to speak directly with
Chinese President Hu, as well as other leaders in the region, to urge them to
use what influence they may have to persuade North Korea to temper its behavior
and return to the negotiating table," said Lee Feinstein, ACA Board member
and former Principal Deputy Director, Policy Planning Staff, U.S. Department
of State. "To
date, China has been unwilling to exert what economic or political leverage it
may have over North Korea," Feinstein said.
Feinstein also suggested, "Secretary of State Rice should convene a
meeting of the foreign ministers of South Korea, Japan, China, and Russia to
work out a new joint strategy to break the impasse." After meeting on the
North Korean issue today, the UN Security Council is reportedly divided about
how to respond.
"Other states that have considered or pursued nuclear weapons but later
foresaken them, such as Brazil, South Africa, and Ukraine, could also play a
helpful role by urging North Korea to step back from the nuclear brink," Feinstein
stated.
"It would also be useful for U.S. and North Korean officials to meet in a business-like
fashion to resolve concerns about illegal conterfeiting of U.S. currency in order
to help smooth the way for the resumption of more important talks on denuclearization,"
said Paul Kerr, ACA Research Analyst on the North Korean nuclear program.
The latest crisis began unfolding back in the fall of 2002 when the United States
confronted North Korean diplomats about a covert uranium enrichment effort, which
was a violation of the 1994 Agreed Framework. In November 2002, fuel oil shipments
to North Korea (as called for under the Agreed Framework) were terminated by
Washington and its partners. North Korea retaliated by ejecting International
Atomic Energy Agency inspectors from its nuclear complex, renewing plutonium
production, and announcing that it was withdrawing from the nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty. Today, North Korea continues to produce plutonium for its suspected nuclear
weapons program and may have as much as 6-12 bombs worth of fissile material.
"U.S. leaders must interpret the latest North Korean threat as an opportunity
for resuming constructive dialogue on the basis of the agreed principles for
disarmament outlined last year," recommended Kerr. "If the President and
Secretary of State fail to seize the diplomatic initiative now, a bad situation
will get worse," Kerr said.
ACA recently held a press
conference on the North Korean nuclear challenge, featuring Congressman
Jim Leach (R-Iowa), James Kelly, and Dan Poneman. A full
transcript of the event is available online. Other material and information
on North Korea is available on ACA's North
Korea country resources page.
# # #
The Arms Control Association (ACA) is a
nonprofit membership organization dedicated to promoting effective arms control
policies. ACA publishes the monthly journal Arms
Control Today.
|