AP: U.S. to press North Korea on nukes (AP) Updated: 2005-10-17 22:00
New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, on his way to North Korea for three days
of talks, said Monday he would press the country for "concrete steps" to
dismantle its atomic weapons program and a commitment to allow verification that
it will remain nuclear-free.
Richardson, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, also told
The Associated Press during a refueling stop in Tokyo that he would urge
North Korean officials to cooperate with humanitarian aid organizations and allow
them to operate more freely in the country.
"We're going to focus on two important areas: one is verification, the second
is what steps are the North Koreans taking to dismantle their nuclear weapons —
concrete steps," Richardson told the AP at Yokota Air Base on the outskirts of
Tokyo.
North Korea's state-run news agency reported Monday evening that Richardson
had arrived in Pyongyang.
The Democratic governor has been to North Korea several times before and has
kept up ties with Pyongyang officials over the years. He was visiting Pyongyang
at the request of North Korea.
Richardson, however, denied that he was "an interloper," saying that he was
fully supportive of the Bush administration's policy of working with North Korea
through the so-called six-party talks on its nuclear program.
"I'm trying to be helpful," Richardson said. "I've kept up my dialogue with
them at their request, I've had a long relationship with them and I want to take
advantage of that relationship to help my country."
Richardson was invited by the North Koreans in May, but postponed his trip
when Washington asked him to wait until the recent round of talks in Beijing on
Korea's nuclear weapons was completed. The United States had provided with him
and his entourage with an Air Force plane for the trip.
The Beijing talks ended with a commitment by North Korea to abandon its
nuclear program, which Pyongyang claims has already yielded a weapon. Richardson
said that he would push the North Koreans to commit to specific steps to
implement that agreement.
The next round of talks, which also involves China, Japan, South Korea and
Russia, was scheduled for November but no date has been set.
"It was a major step forward in the last six party talks, and now is the
follow through," Richardson said. "Where I think I can help is in the
implementation — I'm not there to negotiate anything new."
The governor was accompanied by public health, energy and other officials
from his state. Richardson said he hoped their presence would show the North
Koreans what kind of assistance they could expect in return for giving up
nuclear weapons.
"The idea behind the experts is to say, look ... there will be advantages" to
abandoning atomic bombs, he said.
Richardson said he did not expect to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong
Il and instead hopes to meet with Foreign Ministry and defense officials. The
entourage was scheduled to stay in North Korea from Monday evening until
Thursday, then travel to Japan and South Korea to brief officials. The group is
scheduled to be back in New Mexico on Oct. 22.
Richardson developed a reputation as a roving diplomat when he served in
Congress, traveling to Iraq, North Korea, Cuba and Sudan to win the freedom of
captive Americans. Richardson left Congress to join the administration of former
President Bill Clinton as ambassador to the United Nations.
For Richardson, who's considered a likely presidential contender in 2008, the
trip offers a potential chance to display his foreign policy know-how. The
governor, who is up for re-election next year, denied seeking advantage from the
trip and said that foreign policy should be beyond partisan politics.
Since his election as governor, Richardson has remained active in foreign
affairs, appearing frequently on national TV hosting international visitors in
Santa Fe, including officials from China, North and South Korea, and
Japan.
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