US sees NKorea ending uranium enrichment programme

By Staff
|
Google Oneindia News

SYDNEY, Oct 16 (Reuters) US Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill said today he believed North Korea would stop its uranium enrichment programme by the end of the year.

Were the reclusive state to take such a step it would go beyond an agreement struck with regional powers to disable its nuclear facilities and reveal its atomic programmes.

Speaking to the Sydney Institute, Hill said that if North Korea agreed to abandon its last 50 kg of plutonium -- already produced at its Yongbyon reactor, which is to be dismantled -- then peace talks on the divided Korean peninsula could start.

But he said shutting down and dismantling nuclear facilities was not the end of the road: Pyongyang must also dispose of any nuclear fuel to ensure facilities cannot be restarted.

''We have been talking to the North Koreans about making sure there is no fuel to put back in the reactor,'' Hill said in off-the-cuff remarks to the Sydney Institute.

''We have had a lot of discussions with the North Koreans ... I think that by the end of the year we have good reason to believe that whatever uranium enrichment programme they have going, they will not have going by the end of the year.'' In 2002, the United States accused the North of seeking to master enrichment as an alternative source of fissile material for nuclear arms. The North has denied pursuing enrichment.

Pyongyang this month agreed to disable the three main nuclear facilities at its Yongbyon site and reveal what atomic programmes it has by the end of the year in return for aid, a deal regional powers hope will eventually lead to complete nuclear disarmament.

South Korea's envoy to the negotiations told Reuters last week the North is ready to declare how much weapons-grade plutonium it has produced and clarify allegations of having a clandestine programme to enrich uranium for weapons.

Pyongyang, which conducted a nuclear test one year ago, is believed to have enough plutonium to make at least eight or nine atomic bombs.

PEACE PROCESS PROMISE Under the agreement reached between China, the two Koreas, Japan, Russia and the United States, it will get aid equivalent to 950,000 tonnes of heavy fuel oil and Washington will move toward taking it off a U.S. terrorism blacklist.

''Disabling it is not the end of the road, but I think it is an important milestone because it signals to the Noth Koreans that we are not going back from here,'' Hill said.

''We have good reason to believe that begining in the new year, '08, we will have a problem in North Korea that is reduced to the presence of 50 kilos of separated plutonium. Plutonium that has already been produced from this 5 megawatt reactor in Yongbyon,'' Hill said.

''We need to get Korea to abandon that 50 kilos and that will be the toughest sell. If we do get to this point of 50 kilos, one thing we have agreed to start with is the peace process on the Korean peninsula.'' President George W Bush said last month the United States would be willing to consider a peace treaty with North Korea if it gave up its nuclear weapons programme. A peace treaty would replace the truce that ended the 1950-53 Korean War.

Hill said a peace treaty could see North Korea ''accepted as part of the landscape on th Korean peninsula'' and the demilitarised zone turned into an international border.

He also flagged the creation of a Northeast Asia Peace and Security Mechanism, a regional body of the six-party nations aimed at solving issues at a multilateral level.

''Ultimately it is not clear what the North Koreans want to do, they are one of the most isolated countries in the world,'' he said.

Reuters SS DB1152

For Daily Alerts
Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
X