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US envoy: Nuke talks still 'in business'
(AP)
Updated: 2005-09-16 17:03

No end date has been set for the negotiations. The latest nuclear talks reconvened following a five-week recess after the last session failed to yield an agreement during 13 days of meetings.

The United States has said giving a reactor to the North is out of the question, given the cost and the communist nation's history of deceit over its pursuit of nuclear technology to build weapons.

The North was promised two such reactors under a 1994 deal that fell apart in late 2002 after the latest nuclear crisis erupted. Light-water reactors are less easily diverted for weapons use.

"This is a problem related to the United States' political will to get rid of its hostile policy toward us and peacefully coexist," Hyun said.

But the North Korean spokesman added his government still hoped to "solve the nuclear issue peacefully through dialogue."

Hill called the reactor demand a "nonstarter."

North Korea, "not for the first time, has chosen to isolate itself," Hill said Thursday evening. The country "has a rather sad and long history of making the wrong decision."


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