Top US non-proliferation official resigns
Washington, Jan 25: The top US non-proliferation official submitted his resignation leaving the Bush administration with another major vacancy as it struggles to resolve nuclear-related disputes with Iran and North Korea.
Robert Joseph, who has a reputation as a hardliner with deep skepticism about the potential for any serious deal with Pyongyang, plans to leave the government in February after completing work-related assignments in Ankara and Moscow.
Joseph, who holds the title of undersecretary for arms control and international security at the State Department, declined comment. But other officials told Reuters he had signed his resignation letter yesterday.
One senior official said Joseph was in the administration for six years -- first on the White House National Security Council staff and later moving to the State Department -- and felt it was time to leave government.
Asked if a potential North Korea deal had anything to do with the decision, the senior official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said: ''I don't know. He just told me he just decided it's time to go.'' However, Joseph's departure comes amid a flurry of diplomacy that US and Asian officials increasingly believe is likely to produce the kind of nuclear freeze deal with North Korea that Joseph and other hardliners have long opposed.
Details about recent US-North Korean negotiating sessions have been closely held within the US government -- even from officials who might normally know about such matters.
But officials said they expect an agreement to include a US compromise on releasing at least some of the 24 million dollars in North Korean accounts frozen by Macao authorities in a Macao bank because of US accusations about Pyongyang's counterfeiting and money laundering activities.
North Korea has cited the accounts frozen in Banco Delta Asia as the major reason for stonewalling six-country talks on ending its nuclear program.
After US negotiator Chris Hill held talks with North Korea in Berlin last week, South Korea said Pyongyang appears more open to US and South Korean incentives to scrap its nuclear weapons program.
Another
round
of
talks
A
US
official
told
Reuters
yesterday:
''I
wouldn't
say
there
is
an
agreement
but
a
better
set
of
understandings.
Hill
had
some
latitude
(to
maneuver)
if
they
(North
Koreans)
gave
him
something
to
work
with.''
The
official,
who
like
the
others
spoke
anonymously
because
of
the
sensitivity
of
the
diplomacy,
cautioned,
''There
are
decisions
yet
to
be
made
in
both
capitals
but
we're
headed
in
a
direction''
that
could
produce
an
agreement.
Initial progress would come at the start of another round of six-country talks -- involving the two Koreas, the United States, Japan, Russia and China -- which are likely to resume next month, he said.
If that doesn't happen, ''there's nothing else to talk about,'' the official added.
Several officials said they expected Pyongyang to agree to halt operations at their main known nuclear complex Yongbyon, a key US demand.
Joseph is the latest high-level departure from the State Department as embattled President George W Bush begins his final two years in office. Other vacancies include deputy secretary, counselor and assistant secretaries for counter-terrorism and political-military affairs.
Joseph, a major force behind the administration's controversial proliferation security initiative which organized countries in a voluntary program to share intelligence and interdict trade in weapons of mass destruction, is expected to teach, write and consult.
''He leaves with the utmost respect of the president and Secretary of State (Condoleezza) Rice and certainly that respect is mutual,'' the senior US official said.
Reuters