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US says NKorea very helpful in nuclear disablement

by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Nov 6, 2007
US experts supervising the disabling of North Korea's nuclear plants have made a good start and the North has been very cooperative, their team leader said Tuesday.

Pyongyang's action to roll back its atomic programme, after half a century of research and development, follows a February six-nation accord under which it will receive major aid and diplomatic benefits for full denuclearisation.

State Department official Sung Kim, who heads up the nine-strong team overseeing the unprecedented operation which began Monday at the North's Yongbyon complex, arrived here on Tuesday to brief officials.

Asked by reporters if the North had been cooperative, Kim said: "Yes, very cooperative."

He added: "I think we are off to a good start. I hope to achieve all the disablement, at least this phase of disablement, by December 31."

A key priority is the reactor at Yongbyon, the source of the plutonium used in the communist state's October 2006 nuclear test. Kim said work had been done at the reactor and the complex's other main facilities, a reprocessing plant and a fuel fabrication plant.

The North shut down the reactor in July. Disablement, scheduled for completion by year-end, aims to make it and other facilities unusable for at least a year while talks on total denuclearisation continue.

Pyongyang will receive energy aid worth hundreds of millions of dollars in return for disablement and a full declaration of all its nuclear programmes, including a suspected highly enriched uranium project.

"So far, so good," said South Korea's chief nuclear envoy Chun Yung-Woo.

The declaration of programmes is "much more important" than the disabling of nuclear facilities, he told AFP.

"In the declaration, there are many factors that should be clarified -- for instance, the uranium enrichment programme (UEP) and the plutonium programmes too. The key is how precise and complete the declaration will be."

US claims in 2002 that the North was operating a covert highly enriched uranium programme to make weapons fuel, in addition to the plutonium operation, led to the collapse of a 1994 nuclear disarmament deal.

The two Koreas, the United States, China, Japan and Russia have been haggling since August 2003 on making the North nuclear-free.

If the North goes on next year to dismantle the plants and give up its plutonium stockpile and nuclear weapons, it can expect normalised relations with Washington and a peace pact to replace the 1950-1953 Korean War armistice.

Another incentive is the North's removal from Washington's list of state sponsors of terrorism.

This designation prevents the impoverished and isolated state from receiving US economic assistance, and also blocks loans from the World Bank and other multilateral organisations.

At a meeting in Beijing between the chief US and North Korean nuclear negotiators on October 31, Washington gave Pyongyang "concrete" terms for its removal from the terror list, Yonhap news agency said.

Those terms included "not only implementing 11 concrete measures aimed at disabling the nuclear facilities by year-end but also clarifying the UEP based on more convincing evidence," a government official told the agency in Boston.

The Yonhap reporter was accompanying South Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-Soon on a US visit.

In a speech Monday at Harvard University, Song cautioned that negotiators were "entering untrodden territory" in dealing with nuclear disablement.

"Thus, we may hit a snag anytime," he said.

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NKorea starts disabling nuclear facilities
Seoul (AFP) Nov 5, 2007
North Korea on Monday started an unprecedented disabling of its nuclear programme under the supervision of a US team of experts, US officials said.







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