WASHINGTON - US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she wanted quick
results in North Korean disarmament talks that resume next week, setting a
two-year time frame to dismantle Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, seen here, said she wanted quick results in North Korean disarmament
talks that resume next week, setting a two-year time frame to dismantle
Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program. [AFP]
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"I'm delighted the talks are going to start again, but they have to start to
show results pretty soon," Rice told AFP in an exclusive interview a week before
the six-party negotiations begin in Beijing following a 13-month break.
Rice said Washington was ready to offer North Korea economic aid, energy
assistance and improved political relations if it follows through on a September
2005 "joint statement" in which it pledged to abandon the development of nuclear
weapons.
But she declined to provide details of specific incentives being put on the
table by Washington ahead of the talks, which will also involve China, Japan,
Russia and South Korea.
"I think that everyone is looking, in the next round or so, for the North
Koreans to do something that demonstrates that they are in fact committed to
denuclearization," she said.
Rice said her goal was to have North Korea complete irreversible steps to
dismantle its nuclear arms program before the end of President George W. Bush's
term in January 2009.
"It's the only timetable I've got -- I'll be long gone in two years, of
course that's my timetable," she said.
Rice said it would take longer for North Korea to fully "break down" its
nuclear infrastructure, which includes a plutonium-producing reactor at
Yongbyon, fuel reprocessing facilities and a test site where the Stalinist
regime exploded its first nuclear device on October 9.
"But it shouldn't take very long to take some steps that would clearly be
irreversible in terms of denuclearization," she said.
The six-nation forum started in 2003 in an effort to stop the North acquiring
nuclear weapons.
North Korea signed on to the vaguely worded September 2005 joint statement to
give up its nuclear ambitions in return for security guarantees, energy benefits
and other aid.
But another round of talks in November failed to make any progress, and North
Korea pulled out of the negotiations shortly afterwards to protest US financial
sanctions imposed against it for alleged money laundering and counterfeiting.
It then conducted its first nuclear weapons test on October 9, triggering
global condemnation -- including from closest ally China -- and unprecedented
United Nations sanctions.
Under heavy pressure from China, North Korea agreed on October 31 to return
to the talks.
But in a sign of how difficult the negotiations are likely to be, it then
took more than five weeks to set a starting date amid differences over what
would be discussed in the forum.
Rice's top envoy on the issue, Assistant Secretary of State Chris Hill, will
arrive in Beijing on Saturday and could hold preliminary talks with his Chinese
and North Korean counterparts ahead of Monday's formal meeting, a senior US
official said.
Among the issues expected to be addressed is a timetable for inspectors from
the International Atomic Energy Agency to begin visiting North Korean nuclear
sites.
North Korea also wants Washington to ease its financial sanctions as a show
of good faith.
Rice expressed the hope that the six-party negotiations would ultimately
involve far more than simply disarming North Korea.
"We've been very clear that we think that what's at stake is more than just
the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula -- it's the whole future of the
Korean peninsula as well as security relations with the region as a whole," she
said.