North Korea nuclear talks open in Beijing (AP) Updated: 2005-11-09 15:51 Pyongyang appears to be dragging its feet, said Peter Beck, the Seoul-based
director of the North East Asia Project for the International Crisis Group, an
independent think tank.
"I don't think they're serious about progress yet," he said. In the meantime,
he said, "Washington has no choice but to go along with this charade."
Even host China tried to lower expectations, saying this week's meeting could
be considered a success even if it produces no written agreement.
"I do not think that progress of the talks needs to be measured by the
signing of a document," Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said. "During
the process, all parties will enhance their understanding for each other and
accumulate consensus."
In Washington, Siegfried Hecker, a U.S. scientist who toured North Korea's
reactors in August, said he believes Pyongyang is "moving full speed ahead with
its nuclear weapons programs."
Hecker, a senior fellow at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, was given an
inside look at apparent plutonium production by North Korean scientists.
"They're poised to continue their program, to make more plutonium and to
strengthen their deterrents," Hecker said at a nuclear nonproliferation
conference in Washington. "We have to assume that the North Koreans also have
made at least a few primitive nuclear devices."
U.S. intelligence has previously estimated that North Korea has separated
enough plutonium for at least one or two nuclear weapons.
South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun said the talks were the only way to
resolve the dispute, which erupted in 2002.
"Although it may take some time," Roh said at a luncheon with foreign
journalists in Seoul, "failure is inconceivable."
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