Washington Considers Representative Office in Pyongyang

Korea Times
Yoon Won-sup
10/11/2007

The United States is considering setting up a representative office in Pyongyang as a diplomatic mission, according to a report Wednesday.

Radio Free Asia said the United States will set up a diplomatic mission in Pyongyang, and its form would most likely be a representative office, not a liaison office or an embassy.

The U.S.-based media quoted a source as saying that the U.S. government and Congress are discussing the level of a diplomatic mission in Pyongyang, which will depend on progress in North Korea’s dismantlement of its nuclear weapons program.

Washington reportedly plans to remove North Korea off its list of terror-sponsoring states this year after North Korea disables its nuclear facilities and declares all its nuclear weapons programs. After the removal, the United States will likely begin the process of normalizing relations with North Korea, according to the report.

Experts showed optimism on the moves to normalize relations with North Korea.

A U.S. official who worked on the creation of a diplomatic mission in Pyongyang in 1994 told the radio station that it would be good for Washington to have representation in North Korea in order to understand it.

The official stressed that the absence of a mission may lead the United States to make policy based on wrong information.

However, the experts agreed that the prerequisite for the diplomatic mission was the denuclearization of North Korea.

“It is not so meaningful a debate to discuss whether to set up a representative- or embassy-level mission in Pyongyang because there will be a U.S. Embassy in the end,” a senior Korean government official said. “But the more important thing is that North Korea moves toward denuclearization for this to be realized.”

The United States promised to establish full diplomatic relations with North Korea, depending on North Korea’s actions toward denuclearization on the Oct. 3 agreement reached at six-party talks involving the two Koreas, the United States, China, Russia and Japan.

U.S.-North Korea relations have recently been improving. In early September, Christopher Hill, the top U.S. negotiator to the talks, had a successful meeting with his North Korean counterpart Kim Kye-gwan in Geneva on the normalization of relations.

Share

Comments are closed.