Pope’s Letter to Be Delivered to North Korean Catholics

February 20th, 2007

Korea Times
2/20/2007

Pope Benedict XVI has addressed a letter to North Korea’s Catholics to be delivered by a South Korean delegation of the Catholic humanitarian organization Caritas at Pyongyang, the Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported Monday quoting a Caritas spokesman.

The visit by the Catholic relief organization will take place on March 27-31 and is intended to “strengthen relations with the authorities and analyze needs,’’ AFP quoted Caritas spokeswoman Nancy McNally as saying.

Caritas is a confederation of 162 Catholic relief, development and social service organizations working to build a better world, especially for the poor and oppressed, in over 200 countries and territories.

The global news agency said the letter is a reply to a Christmas address sent to the pontiff by the National Korean Catholic Association.

There are reportedly around 3,000 to 4,000 Catholics in North Korea, who are members of a church which comes under the control of the North Korean government and has no official ties to the Vatican.

Last November the Pope urged the international community to intensify humanitarian aid to the world’s most vulnerable countries, particularly North Korea.

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Expansion of Kaesong Site to Resume by April

February 20th, 2007

Korea Times
Lee Jin-woo
2/20/2007

Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung said Tuesday the ministry would resume the halted expansion of a joint industrial complex in the North Korean city of Kaesong no later than mid-April.

Last September, the South Korean government decided to hold off expanding the Kaesong complex because of heightened tension on the Korean Peninsula after the North’s test-firing of seven missiles in July. After Pyongyang’s first-ever underground nuclear test on Oct. 9, tensions increased further.

Minister Lee had been negative about the expansion of the joint business venture, saying more progress in the six-party talks as a prerequisite condition to proceed with the plan.

“We’ve already completed preparing some 3.3 million square meters of land there with almost perfect water and electricity supply,” Lee said in a press briefing at the ministry in Seoul. “Considering its important role for small- and medium-sized South Korean companies, I believe we should resume the expansion plan late next month or mid-April at the latest.”

The Kaesong site is one of two major cross-border projects South Korea has kept afloat despite the chilly inter-Korean relations. The two Koreas are also runing a joint tourism project at Mt. Kumgang in North Korea.

When fully expanded by 2012, the complex is expected to house about 2,000 South Korean manufacturers employing about half a million North Koreans, according to the Ministry of Unification.

The minister also said another inter-Korean summit would be a very useful tool to boost a more reconciliatory atmosphere on the Korean Peninsula, but said the government is not making any efforts to prepare for one.

“Just like the historic summit in June 2000 did, another inter-Korean summit would play a crucial role in bringing peace and prosperity between the two Koreas without a doubt,” Lee said.

“However, an agreement between the leaders of the two Koreas is necessary to realize another summit. We’re not currently working on the issue with North Korea.”

Lee also said South and North Korea should play a leading role in forming a separate peace forum among nations participating in the nuclear disarmament talks. The establishment of the peace forum was mentioned in an agreement made in Sept. 19, 2005, which laid out the course for North Korea’s eventual denuclearization.

“I’m not sure exactly how many nations will take part in the forum to guarantee peace on the Korean Peninsula. It could be four including the two Koreas, the United States and China,” Lee said. “However, Seoul and Pyongyang should play a leading role in preparing the forum.”

Lee said, if last week’s agreement in the six-party talks is carried out as planned, the two Koreas should begin to set up the peace forum at the same time.

On Feb. 13, the North pledged to take the first steps toward dismantling its nuclear program in return for energy aid and other humanitarian assistance during the six-party talks.

Land for S. Korean companies in Kaesong complex on sale next month: ministry
Yonhap

2/20/2007

South Korea’s Unification Ministry said Tuesday that it plans to parcel out a 530,000-pyeong lot for South Korean manufacturers in the inter-Korean industrial complex in Kaesong late next month. One pyeong is 3.3 square meters.

The land is the remainder of the 1-million-pyeong lot which the South and North Korean governments have been jointly developing in the western North Korean border town in the first phase of the inter-Korean project which is to construct a 20-million-pyeong industrial base for South Korean companies by 2012. The complex, if completed, is expected to employ as many as half a million North Korean workers for some 2,000-3,000 South Korean manufacturers.

The government originally planned to sell the lot in three stages last year, but had to put it off amid inter-Korean tension caused by the North’s missile and nuclear tests.

“I believe it’s proper to sell the lot as early as the end of next month,” Unification Minister Lee Jae-joung said, citing his report submitted to President Roh Moo-hyun on Feb. 6 on his agency’s business for this year.

The Kaesong Industrial Complex is one of the two major cross-border projects that South Korea has kept afloat in spite of U.S. opposition. The two Koreas also run a joint tourism project at the North’s scenic Mount Geumgang.

In the industrial complex, South Korean businesses use cheap but skilled North Korean labor to produce goods. Currently, 21 labor-intensive South Korean factories employ about 11,160 North Korean workers.

But U.S. hard-liners criticize the complex, claiming that the factories where North Korean workers earn about US$60 per month are actually channels to funnel much-needed hard currency to the tyrannical North Korean regime.

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North Korea Enacts Law Against Money Laundering

February 20th, 2007

Korea Times
Park Song-wu
2/20/2007

The National Intelligence Service (NIS) on Tuesday confirmed that North Korea recently enacted a law that prohibits money laundering.

The standing committee of the North’s Supreme People’s Assembly adopted the legislation last October to ban financial transactions involving illegal earnings, the agency said in a press release.

The enactment apparently aimed at settling the U.S. financial sanctions on a bank in Macau that was blacklisted by Washington in September 2005 for its suspicious role in helping the North conduct illicit financial activities, it said.

Under the latest six-party agreement, reached on Feb. 13, the United States is to resolve financial sanctions within 30 days on North Korean assets worth $24 million that have been frozen in the Macau bank.

The NIS also confirmed that the North has a highly enriched uranium (HEU) program.

NIS officials made the confirmation during a closed-door National Assembly session as the Beijing deal on initial actions to implement the denuclearization of North Korea came under criticism for not mentioning the HEU program.

After ending the session, a lawmaker said on condition of anonymity that the NIS officials confirmed the existence of the HEU program in the North.

When North Korea’s uranium enrichment program came to the fore in 2002, Washington and Pyongyang accused each other of violating the 1994 agreed framework that eventually collapsed.

Seoul and Washington are reportedly sharing the view that Pyongyang has an HEU program, for which the North began purchasing large quantities of centrifuge-related equipment in 2001.

But what is not yet clear is whether the North has begun to produce weapons-grade uranium.

In a separate Assembly session, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Song Min-soon also faced the same question from lawmakers on why the Beijing agreement did not mention the HEU program.

He avoided speaking specifically on the sensitive issue that triggered the second nuclear crisis in October 2002. But he said it will be addressed as the latest agreement invoked section one of the joint statement adopted in September 2005.

“The Beijing deal is about initial steps, and it’s not a complete roadmap toward the denuclearization,” Song said. “But the recent agreement requires the North to declare all of its nuclear programs.”

In section one of the September statement, the North committed to abandoning “all nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs” and returning at an early date to the treaty on the nonproliferation of nuclear weapons treaty (NPT) and to International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards.

The main opposition Grand National Party (GNP) also expressed doubts over Pyongyang’s willingness to abide by its pledges to implement initial measures for the denuclearization of North Korea.

Rep. Kim Yong-kap of the conservative party found problems with the deal reached in Beijing on Feb. 13 since key components of it, especially on the disablement of the North’s nuclear facilities, are overly “abstract.”

“Despite the North’s agreement to disable its 5 megawatt reactor in Yongbyon, it later changed the wording into a temporary stoppage of operations,” Kim said.

The North’s media promptly reported the result of latest six-party talks, but did not use the term “disablement.” Seoul officials interpreted it as an attempt to mislead North Koreans so they do not lose their pride.

“In addition, there is no deadline on the disablement. I am simply doubtful of the deal’s practicality,” he said.

According to a Chosun Ilbo-Gallup Korea poll, conducted on Feb. 19, 77.9 percent of respondents predicted that the North would not keep its pledges, while 15.8 percent of the 1,006 respondents trusted the North.

But Song said the Beijing deal was a good chance to reaffirm Pyongyang’s willingness for an early denuclearization.

He also dismissed the GNP’s claim that Seoul is determined to share the largest financial burden of aiding the North to achieve a second inter-Korean summit in the run-up to the December presidential election.

“We will not bear all the burden because all five parties have agreed to provide economic aid on the principle of equality and equity,” he said. “And the provision of assistance will be made in line with the principle of action for action.”

As a first step toward denuclearization, North Korea is to shut down its nuclear-related facilities at Yongbyon while allowing United Nations nuclear inspectors back to the nuclear complex to seal them off.

Seoul’s top nuclear negotiator, Chun Yung-woo, said in Beijing on Feb. 13 that the deal is working under an “incentive system.”

For shutting down the Yongbyon complex, the North would receive the equivalent of 50,000 tons of heavy fuel oil in emergency relief aid. An additional 950,000 tons of heavy oil or equivalent aid will be provided to the country upon its completion of disabling other nuclear-related facilities.

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Deliver Humanitarian Aid Directly to the Starving Affected Areas

February 20th, 2007

Daily NK
Kang Jae Hyok
2/20/2006

Every year when spring arrives, North Korea faces yet another food crisis. 10 years after the “march of suffering,” North Korea has still made little change.

The greatest change that has occurred is by the North Korean people. The most of North Koreans have surpassed the ‘march of suffering’ and have survived by relying on themselves

In comparison to last year, the Korea Rural Development Administration (RDA) estimated that North Korea had experienced a loss of 1.8% (60 thousands tons) in agricultural production at 4.48 million tons of cereal. The World Food Program (WFP) also predicted similar figures at 4.3 million tons.

On the other hand, a national North Korea aid organization Good Friends reported that only 2.8 million tons of agricultural production had been made and that if any less than 1.5 million tons of food aid was supported, North Korea would be faced with another severe food crisis.

In the 90’s foreign aid could block mass starvation

During the “march of suffering” that began in the mid-90’s, food distributions were suddenly terminated. Nonetheless, people went on working, starving, believing that food distributions would begin once again.

However, one month passed then two, and still the distributions did not resume. In the end, the number of deaths from starvation began to arise. Yet, North Korean authorities did not respond with any countermeasures. As a result, in 3~4 years, 3mn North Korean citizens died of starvation.

Nonetheless, the tragic mass starvation that occurred at the time could have been stooped if it weren’t for the irresponsible acts of North Korean authorities. We can view this by analyzing the figures denoting the amount of aid supplied from 1995~1999.

Year   1995   1996   1997   1998   1999
Production of food
         3490   2500   2680   2830   4280
Aid from FAO
           980   1070   1440   1490   1190
Aid from S.Korea
           960   1050   1630   1030   1070
Food distributions in North Korea
         4450   3550   4120   3860   4450
       ~4470 ~3570 ~4310 ~4320 ~5476
Death rate 
               615    1704     549 
         (Unit: 1,000 tons, million persons)
 
Table of North Korea’s food production and foreign aid in the 90’s in comparison to the death rate. (Good Friends 06.12.22)

According to the table above, South Korea and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) aided North Korea with 2mn tons of food annually from 1995~1999.

If we consider that only 10,000 tons of food is needed to provide the whole of North Korea a day, then there would be no reason for a shortage in food distributions with a total of 3.7mn tons of food aid being supplied. According to the table above, annual aid provided to North Korea was 3.55mn tons at the minimum and 4.45mn tons maximum. This equates on average at 4.09mn tons of supplies.

However, during this period 3mn people died of starvation and 30mn people defected from North Korea. Contrary, there has never been a time where so much foreign aid was supplied to North Korea. Why then at a time where greatest aid was given to North Korea, was there the greatest number of deaths?

One of the essential reasons behind this occurrence was the fact that foreign aid never reached the provinces of North Hamkyung, Yangkang and Jakang where food was most needed. If food aid had been distributed to the areas most dire of starvation, then at the least, this incident would not have occurred.

At the time, most of the aid was distributed preferentially to soldiers, authorities and powerful ministers in Pyongyang. On the whole, aid to North Korea had been sent via ship through Nampo, Haeju and Wonsan harbor, then supplied to Pyongyang and South Pyongan province.

During the 90’s, transportation of cargo was practically immobilized due to the shortage of electricity and lack of fuel which ultimately led to the suspension of locomotives. On the whole, goods are transported via railroad, however, in the 90’s, both passenger and freight trains had come to a halt.

Basically, it takes about a fortnight to travel return, from Wonsan, Gangwon province to Najin, North Hamkyung on train 21. The Pyongyang-Tumen River train which departs from Pyongyang to Sunbong, North Hamkyung on train 1, also takes more than 10 days travel return.

Back then, it took twice as long to for a freight train to reach its destination in comparison to a passenger train. 10,000 tons of foreign aid that arrived at Wonsan harbor took 2~3 months to transport from North Hamkyung to Chongjin. In other words, it would take more than 2 years to distribute 100,000 tons of food to Wonsan in Gangwon province to Chongjin in North Hamkyung province. Hence, it is pointless to rely on railroad to distribute goods.

Losses incurred while transporting aid

Further, 30~40% of goods go missing while being transported. Every time a cargo train stops, guards responsible for the goods sell rice to traders at wholesale prices so they can use the profits to live. Also, street kids and thieves often steal the goods so that the intial 1,000 ton of rice is often depleted to 600~700 tons upon arriving at its destination.

The problem is that North Korean authorities well aware of this fact that are unwilling to modify the routes or assert change. Ultimately, foreign aid is distributed throughout the regions of Pyongan province where the situation of food is relatively good in comparison to the rest of North Korea.

As rice only lands in the hands of people living in Pyongyang and Pyonan where influential ministers and Kim Jong Il’s elite reside, it can only be analyzed that this situation is occurring under specific motives. In the end, the majority of deaths occurred in Hamkyung, Yangkang and Jakang, and the situation has remained the same until today.

Following the missile launch and nuclear experiment, last year South Korea and the international community suspended food aid to North Korea, and in Feb 13th, the third phase of 5th round 6 Party talks ended with the South Korean government confirming that food aid would resume.

Undoubtedly international food aid is important but unless rice is distributed to the areas in most need, a similar situation to the 90’s will occur once again.

More importantly and urgently, aid must be delivered directly to the provinces of Yangkang, Hamkyung and Jangang. Thinking that North Korean authorities will wisely distribute food aid throughout the country is merely a South Korean fallacy.

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N Korea ‘hit by measles epidemic’

February 20th, 2007

BBC
2/20/2007

North Korea has been hit by a measles epidemic that has killed four people and infected some 3,000, the Red Cross has said.

Measles has been found in 30 counties since the outbreak began in November, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said.

Pyongyang has requested five million doses of vaccine to fight the epidemic.

Correspondents say medicine is in short supply and years of malnutrition has weakened resistance to disease.

In a statement, the IFRC said North Korea had confirmed two children and two adults had died from measles and its complications such as pneumonia.

More than 1,000 people are still receiving treatment for the disease.

The authorities in Pyongyang only confirmed the measles outbreak last week because the disease was believed to have been eradicated from the country in 1992, the federation statement added.

The Red Cross, the World Health Organization and other international bodies are now helping to tackle the outbreak.

There have been recent reports of outbreaks of scarlet fever and typhoid in the reclusive Communist state, where most people are faced with daily food shortages and a dilapidated health service.

4 Dies From Measles Epidemic in North Korea
Korea Times
2/20/2007

A measles epidemic has claimed at least four lives and infected about 3,000 people in North Korea, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said Monday.

The federation said in a statement that measles has been found in 30 North Korean counties since the outbreak started in November last year.

It added that four deaths were reported on Jan. 4 when two children and two adults died from measles and its complications such as pneumonia. Around 3,000 North Koreans were confirmed to have infected with the disease.

Pyongyang has asked international organizations for massive doses of vaccine to prevent further spread of the epidemic.

The North has requested 5 million doses of measles vaccine to immunize its citizens aged from seven to 45.

The requested doses cost $1.5 million, and North Korea will pay the costs for transportation, distribution and staff training.

UNICEF is expected to lead the immunization campaign and keep the related organizations informed of developments.

North Korea’s Ministry of Public Health confirmed the measles epidemic last Thursday, and the information was immediately discussed in a joint meeting the following day by the North Korean Red Cross, the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEF.

The federation said the disease was initially believed to be rubella. The first identification of measles came on Nov. 6 in the northern region of the country.

It added that the communist country has failed to bring the epidemic under control and the disease spread throughout the country.

The WHO supplied Pyongyang with testing kits in January, but there were constraints because North Korea was thought to have eradicated the disease in 1992.

The country’s health care workers were thus not familiar with the disease, the federation pointed out.

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Kim Jong-il orders Japanese cars confiscated

February 19th, 2007

Yonhap
2/19/2007

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il has ordered most Japanese cars in the communist country seized in a sign of his growing discontent with Japan imposing severe sanctions after the North’s detonation of a nuclear bomb last October, informed sources said Monday.

“After he paid tribute to the Kumsusan Memorial Palace on Jan. 1, he saw a Japanese car that wasn’t working blocking the road and gave a National Defense Committee edict to seize Japanese cars,” a source familiar with the North Korean situation said, asking to remain anonymous. North Korea’s founding leader Kim Il-sung’s embalmed body lies in the memorial in Pyongyang.

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British travel agency plans N.K. tour in April on late leader’s birthday

February 18th, 2007

Yonhap
2/18/2007

A British travel firm is organizing an escorted tour of North Korea in April when the secretive nation celebrates the birthday of its late president, who is still venerated by the North as the “great leader.”

Steppes Travel has been recruiting customers from November for the April 11-26 trip to North Korea, advertised in the firm’s Web site as “the last bastion of communism in the world” and an experience that “will surely leave a lasting impression in your mind.”

The price is 2,795 British pounds (US$5,462) per person, and minimum 10 clients must sign up.

The package starts at Mansudae where the statue of North Korea’s late leader Kim Il-sung is flanked by monuments to the anti-Japanese struggle and the Korean War, and Mangyongdae, Kim’s birthplace. The tourists will then visit Kim’s residence Kumsusan on April 15, his birthday, where they are likely to see one of the country’s largest festivities.

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LFNKR Expands its NK Food Supply Network

February 15th, 2007

http://www.northkoreanrefugees.com/2007-02-supply.htm
2/15/2007

The operation to distribute emergency supplies in Hamgyong-bukto, North Korea was a success. Through one of our clandestine local networks, we were able to provide extremely needy people with a total of one ton of rice, as well as clothing and antibiotics. The value of all items supplied equaled 300,000 yen (about US$2,500). The extra supplies were financed by recent donations. Late November of last year, five members of LFNKR’s local group JYO entered Hoeryong-si, North Korea from China, carrying several boxes filled with winter clothing, antibiotics and penicillin.

To avoid indefinite delays at customs, bribes had to be paid to the North Korean customs personnel. Beyond the customs gate, many hungry day workers waited, hoping to earn money by carrying boxes. The JYO members had to keep a firm grip on their supplies so they wouldn’t be snatched away. The rescue team stayed in Hoeryong-si 10 days completing the mission.

They found that the people in the area are cut off from aid from abroad. Local prices are soaring, which adds to the people’s frustration. Although Hoeryong-si has open marketplaces, business hours are restricted. They may only stay open for the 9 hours from 8:00am to 5:00pm. Transactions earlier or later than the specified hours are strictly prohibited. One of the merchants who owns a small market stall (1m x 2m) complained that the restrictions are so severe, he hardly makes enough to survive.

In early September, the marketplace managers were repeatedly confronted by merchants protesting the strict business rules, including the tight business hours. During one protest, the national security guards in Hoeryong-si were called out to suppress the crowd of protesting merchants because one of the protesters had been trampled to death and several others were injured during the demonstration. But the severe restrictions on market activities continued, and that provoked another large demonstration in November. At this protest, 20 to 30 people were reportedly arrested.

The reason for the ongoing protests is simple. A majority of people in North Korea are still starving, and their only option is to engage in trade. Meanwhile, the authorities place unreasonably tight controls on merchandise and free trade at the marketplaces.

According to our local members, the authorities have been strictly limiting the number of people they allow to travel into China. Even with people bribing the authorities, only 2 or 3 out of every hundred applicants are issued permits.

Recently, Chinese people seeking to visit relatives are no longer allowed to enter North Korea unless they are properly registered and can prove they are related. Even tighter restrictions have been placed on North Koreans wishing to visit relatives living in China. In addition, no one is allowed to invite relatives from China without submitting beforehand a set of registration documents showing detailed descriptions of the relatives for identification. The documents are minutely scrutinized by all relevant agents, including the local foreign affairs office, the national security department, and the customs house. Incidentally, the fee for this process is 6,000 won.

Here are a few typical prices of food items in Hoeryong-si in December 2006 (unit: NK won):

Rice (1kg): 1300W
Corn (1kg): 550
Sugar (1kg): 1800
Wheat flour (1kg) 750
Pork (1kg): 3300 

Our JYO rescue team handed out winter clothing to people who could not afford to buy warm garments, and also distributed antibiotics to those needing them. The shortage of medicines in the market places is obvious. A single package of antibiotics was selling for at least 12,000 to 16,000 won, while in China it is sold for less than half that, or 15RMB (about 6,000 won).

After the JYO team’s return from North Korea, they received news that the marketplace closing time had finally been extended to 7:00pm as a result of the two large protest demonstrations. The authorities were forced to accept the fact that the merchants can barely survive unless they work extra hours, even if they have to use kerosene lamps to continue business after dark.

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N. Korean nuclear envoy says North is ready to implement 6-way pact

February 15th, 2007

Yonhap
2/15/2007

North Korea’s top nuclear envoy on Thursday said his country is ready to carry out an agreement from the recent six-party talks over its nuclear ambition, which calls on the communist nation to shut down its nuclear-related facilities in two months.

“We are ready to implement the results of the meeting,” Kyodo News agency quoted Kim Kye-gwan as telling Russia’s top diplomat in the North and an official from the Chinese embassy there at Pyongyang’s airport.

The Russian and the Chinese diplomats were apparently at the airport to welcome the North’s vice foreign minister who returned from Beijing where he and nuclear negotiators from South Korea, the United States, Japan, Russia and China held talks since last Thursday.

Pyongyang puts some spin on 6-way talks agreement
State media say it will close nuclear facilities ‘temporarily’

Joong Ang Daily
Brian Lee

Pyongyang’s state-controlled media have given what may be a signal that Pyongyang is prepared to reinterpret Tuesday’s agreement at the six-party nuclear talks in Beijing even before the ink on it is dry.

The Korean Central News Agency, hours after the nuclear deal was reached, reported that participants had agreed to supply North Korea with 1 million tons of heavy fuel oil in return for a “temporary” suspension of operations at the North’s nuclear facilities.

It also reported that Washington and Pyongyang would begin discussions possibly leading to diplomatic relations, but did not describe the rest of the agreement, in which the closing of the North’s facilities was intended as a prelude to their “disablement.” The shipment of all but 50,000 tons of crude oil supplies was contingent on that complete shutdown, a declaration of all the North’s nuclear programs and international inspections of those facilities.

It was not clear, however, whether the reports were intended as a definitive statement of North Korea’s interpretation of the agreement or, as one South Korean official suggested yesterday, a bit of domestic propaganda to demonstrate to its populace that its nuclear programs had boosted the nation’s prestige.

Some private analysts in Korea concurred. Koh Yoo-hwan, a North Korean specialist at Dongguk University, contended that because of the North’s tight control of information, even the most senior military leaders in the North would not be able to see easily the entire text of the agreement. “So the announcement focused on what the North would get,” he concluded

But a diplomatic source in Seoul was not fully convinced, noting that sometimes agreements were struck only by deliberately vague diplomatic language. “Different interpretations lead to agreements,” he said. “Shaky ones.”

Even the Chosun Shinbo, a pro-Pyongyang news outlet in Japan, carried a report of the agreement along the lines of the Pyongyang news agency, even though the full text of the agreement is widely available in Japan. (The full text of the agreement can be found on the JoongAng Daily’s Web site, joongangdaily.joins.com.)

Many independent analysts were cautious in reacting to the agreement, although the political leadership in all six nations praised it. Michael Green, a Georgetown University professor and former State Department official who participated in earlier nuclear negotiations with Pyongyang, said the hard part of implementing the agreement would come in its second phase, the “dismantlement” of the North’s nuclear reactor and nuclear fuel reprocessing facility, which has no deadline attached.

The six-party talks are scheduled to resume in Beijing next month; if the commitments by both Pyongyang and its negotiating partners are met within the 60-day deadline, the foreign ministers of the six countries are also expected to meet to discuss next steps.

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Outside Pressures Broke Korean Deadlock

February 14th, 2007

NY Times
David E. Sanger

It is hard to imagine that either George W. Bush or Kim Jong-il would have agreed even a year ago to the kind of deal they have now approved. The pact, announced Tuesday, would stop, seal and ultimately disable North Korea’s nuclear facilities, as part of a grand bargain that the administration has previously shunned as overly generous to a repressive country — especially one that has not yet said when or if it will give up its nuclear arsenal.

But in the past few months, the world has changed for both Mr. Bush and Mr. Kim, two men who have made clear how deeply they detest each other. Both are beset by huge problems, and both needed some kind of breakthrough.

For Mr. Bush, bogged down in Iraq, his authority undercut by the November elections, any chance to show progress in peacefully disarming a country that detonated a nuclear test just four months ago could no longer be passed up. As one senior administration official said over the weekend, the prospect that Mr. Bush might leave Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and North Korea more dangerous places than he found them “can’t be very appealing.”

Still, the accord came under fast criticism from right and left that it was both too little and too late.

For years, Mr. Bush’s administration has been paralyzed by an ideological war, between those who wanted to bring down North Korea and those who thought it was worth one more try to lure the country out of isolation. In embracing this deal, Mr. Bush sided with those who have counseled engagement, notably his secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, and her chief negotiator, Christopher R. Hill. Mr. Bush took the leap in the hope that in a few months, he will be able to declare that North Korea can no longer produce fuel for new nuclear weapons, even if it has not yet turned over its old ones.

For Mr. Kim, the nuclear explosion — more of a fizzle — that he set off in the mountains not far from the Chinese border in October turned out to be a strategic mistake. The Chinese, who spent six decades protecting the Kim family dynasty, responded by cutting off his military aid, and helping Washington crack down on the banks that financed the Cognac-and-Mercedes lifestyle of the North Korean leadership.

“As a political statement, their test was a red flare for everyone,” said Robert Gallucci, who under President Clinton was the chief negotiator of the 1994 agreement with North Korea, which collapsed four years ago. “It gave President Bush and the Chinese some leverage.”

Mr. Gallucci and other nuclear experts agree that the hardest bargaining with world’s most reclusive, often paranoid, government remains ahead.

Over the next year, under the pact, the North must not only disable its nuclear reactors and reprocessing facilities, it must lead inspectors to its weapons and a suspected second nuclear weapons program. And to get to the next phase of the agreement, the one that gives “disarmament” meaning, North Korea will have to be persuaded to give away the country’s crown jewels: the weapons that make the world pay attention to it.

But before the administration faces off against Mr. Kim in Pyongyang, it will have to confront the many critics of the deal here at home. As the White House took credit on Tuesday for what it called a “first step,” it found itself pilloried by conservatives who attacked the administration for folding in negotiations with a charter member of what Mr. Bush called the “axis of evil,” and for replicating key elements of Mr. Clinton’s agreement with North Korea.

At the same time, Mr. Bush’s advisers were being confronted by barbs from veterans of the Clinton administration, who argued that the same deal struck Tuesday had been within reach several years and a half-dozen weapons ago, had only Mr. Bush chosen to negotiate with the North rather than fixate on upending its government.

In fact, elements of the new decision closely resemble the Clinton deal, called the Agreed Framework. As it did in that accord, the North agrees to “freeze” its operations at Yongbyon, its main nuclear facility, and to allow inspections there. And like that agreement, the new one envisions the North’s ultimately giving up all of its nuclear material.

In two respects, however, the new accord is different: North Korea does not receive the incentives the West has offered — in this case, about a year’s supply of heavy fuel oil and other aid — until it “disables” its equipment at Yongbyon and declares where it has hidden its bombs, nuclear fuel and other nuclear facilities. And the deal is not only with Washington, but with Beijing, Moscow, Seoul and Tokyo.

“We’re building a set of relationships,” Ms. Rice argued Tuesday, saying that the deal would not have been possible if she and President Bush had not been able to swing the Chinese over to their side. Mr. Bush has told colleagues that he believes the turning point came in his own blunt conversations with President Hu Jintao of China, in which, the American president has said, he explained in stark terms that a nuclear North Korea was more China’s problem than America’s.

But the administration was clearly taken aback on Tuesday by the harshness of the critique from the right, led by its recently departed United Nations ambassador, John R. Bolton, who charged that the deal “undercuts the sanctions resolution” against the North that he pushed through the Security Council four months ago.

Democrats, in contrast, were caught between enjoying watching Mr. Bush change course and declaring that the agreement amounted to disarmament-lite. “It gives the illusion of moving more rapidly to disarmament, but it doesn’t really require anything to happen in the second phase,” said Joel Wit, who was the coordinator of the 1994 agreement.

The Bush administration is counting on the lure of future benefits to the North — fuel oil, the peace treaty ending the Korean War it has long craved, an end to other sanctions — to force Mr. Kim to disclose where his nuclear weapons and fuel are stored.

Mr. Bush’s big worry now is that Mr. Kim is playing the administration for time. Many experts think he is betting that by the time the first big deliveries of oil and aid are depleted, America will be distracted by a presidential election.

But Mr. Bush could also end up with a diplomatic triumph, one he needs desperately. To get there, he appears to have changed course. Asked in 2004 about North Korea, he said, “I don’t think you give timelines to dictators and tyrants.”

Now he appears to have concluded that sometimes the United States has to negotiate with dictators and odious rulers, because the other options — military force, sanctions or watching an unpredictable nation gain a nuclear arsenal — seem even worse.

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