Amid Deep Discord, N.Korea Nuke Talks End

The Associated Press
Friday, November 11, 2005; 2:30 AM

BEIJING -- Talks on dismantling North Korea's nuclear program recessed Friday with no sign of progress amid rancor between the North and the United States. Diplomats promised to meet again but set no date.

The fifth round of discussions, which began Wednesday, had been scheduled to break off Friday so diplomats could attend an Asian-Pacific economic conference in South Korea.


U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, left, arrives with North Korean lead delegate Kim Gye Gwan at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on the latest round of six-party talks on North Korea's nuclear program, on Wednesday November 9, 2005. The six-nation talks, aimed at stripping Pyongyang of its nuclear weapons program, resumed Wednesday, following a promise by North Korea at the last round that it would disarm. (AP Photo/Peter PARKS, POOL)
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill, left, arrives with North Korean lead delegate Kim Gye Gwan at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing on the latest round of six-party talks on North Korea's nuclear program, on Wednesday November 9, 2005. The six-nation talks, aimed at stripping Pyongyang of its nuclear weapons program, resumed Wednesday, following a promise by North Korea at the last round that it would disarm. (AP Photo/Peter PARKS, POOL) (Peter Parks - AP)

The recess came after the North reportedly demanded that the United States lift sanctions on firms accused of weapons proliferation and drop accusations that Pyongyang counterfeits U.S. currency.

Washington was pressing the North to suspend work at a plutonium-producing reactor. But the U.S. envoy said North Korean diplomats refused to do that before a formal agreement is reached.

China issued a statement as chairman of the talks saying negotiators affirmed that they would "fully implement" the declaration at the last round of talks in September, when North Korea promised to disarm in exchange for aid and a security guarantee.

The five-sentence statement said envoys put forward proposals for implementing that September declaration but gave no details.

Participating in the talks are the United States, Japan and Russia, as well as China and the two Koreas.

"The parties reaffirmed that they would fully implement the joint statement in line with the principle of `commitment for commitment, action for action,' so as to realize the verifiable denuclearization of the Korean peninsula at an early date," the statement said.

It was read out by China's chief delegate, Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, before the other envoys, who applauded but made no comments of their own.

The dispute erupted after Washington said North Korean officials admitted operating a secret nuclear program in violation of a 1994 deal that gave the isolated, impoverished North energy aid in exchange for giving up atomic development.

Earlier, North Korea reportedly accused the United States of undermining the cooperative spirit of the talks and demanded that the U.S. lift sanctions against firms suspected of weapons proliferation and stop accusing the North of counterfeiting U.S. money.

The United States was pressing North Korea to shut down its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon and immediately stop reprocessing plutonium _ a fuel for bombs _ without waiting for negotiators to draft a disarmament plan.


CONTINUED     1        >

© 2005 The Associated Press