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WORLD / Asia-Pacific

N.Korea to declare nuclear programs

(AP)
Updated: 2007-09-03 07:16

GENEVA - North Korea agreed Sunday to account for and disable its atomic
programs by the end of the year, offering its first timeline for a
process long sought by nuclear negotiators, the chief US envoy said.

North Korean chief negotiator Kim Gye Gwan leaves his hotel prior to a
bilateral meeting between the US and North Korea in Geneva, Switzerland,
Sunday, Sept. 2, 2007. [AP]?

Kim Gye Gwan, head of the North Korean delegation, said separately his
country's willingness to cooperate was clear - in return for "political
and economic compensation" - but he mentioned no dates.

Christopher Hill, a US assistant secretary of state, said two days of
talks between the United States and North Korea in Geneva had been "very
good and very substantive" and would help improve chances of a successful
meeting later this month with Japan, Russia, South Korea and China in
six-nation talks aimed at ending the North's nuclear weapons program and
improving relations between North Korea and other countries.

"One thing that we agreed on is that the DPRK will provide a full
declaration of all of their nuclear programs and will disable their
nuclear programs by the end of this year, 2007," Hill told reporters,
using the initials for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Hill said the declaration will also include uranium enrichment programs,
which the United States fears could be used to make nuclear weapons.

"When we say all nuclear programs, we mean all," he said.

He said later in response to a question that it was the first time that
North Korea had ever offered a timeline for declaring and disabling its
nuclear program.

Kim said, "We agreed a lot of things between the United States and the
DPRK. We are happy with the way the peace talks went."

"We made it clear, we showed clear willingness to declare and dismantle
all nuclear facilities," he said.

The agreement is "very significant, for sure," said Patricia Lewis,
director of the UN Institute for Disarmament Research in Geneva, noting
that North Korea had allowed UN inspectors back into the country and that
they could verify what is declared.

"Confidence can increase and we can see whether or not it's really being
shut down," Lewis said.

Hill declined to say whether the agreement would include more than the
plutonium-producing nuclear reactor in Yongbyon, which North Korea shut
down in July.

"We have to work out some of the details on that," Hill told reporters.
"We will have a declaration in time to disable what needs to be
disabled," he said, adding that "for example the Yongbyon reactor would
have to be included."

He said he and Kim had discussed a range of issues in their two days of
talks at the US and North Korean missions to UN offices in Geneva.

Kim said one of those was North Korea's demand to be removed from the US
list of state sponsors of terrorism.

"In return for this we will receive political and economic compensation,"
he said. "We wouldn't be an enemy country anymore."

Hill said earlier Sunday that improving US relations with North Korea
will depend on other progress in the talks, saying it "is a relationship
that we will continue to try to build step by step with the understanding
that we're not going to have a normalized relationship until we have a
denuclearized North Korea."

He said he expected the next full session of the six-nation talks in
mid-September would produce a "more detailed implementation plan for
'disablement.'"

The meeting in Geneva was part of a flurry of "working group" sessions
called for in February's six-nation accord in which North Korea agreed to
disable its plutonium-producing nuclear reactor and declare and
eventually dismantle all its nuclear activities.

In exchange, North Korea will receive oil and other aid. The US, as part
of the agreement, promised to begin the process of removing the country
from the terrorism list and work toward full diplomatic relations.

Daniel Pinkston, who heads the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the
Monterey, Calif.-based Center for Nonproliferation Studies, said, "I
believe they're going to do it."

But he said it was important that North Korea declare all the uranium
enrichment and plutonium stocks.

Years of tension and deadlock over North Korea's nuclear program - which
peaked with the country's nuclear test last October - have started to
ease in recent months as the talks have made progress.

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