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No Apparent Progress as US, N. Korean, Chinese Negotiators Meet in Beijing


29 November 2006
Wilkison report (Real Audio) - Download 312K - Download (Real) audio clip
Wilkison report (Real Audio) - Download 312K - Listen (Real) audio clip

Officials from the United States, North Korea and China have held a second day of talks in Beijing on resuming negotiations aimed at dismantling North Korea's nuclear weapons program. From the Chinese capital, Roger Wilkison reports there was apparently no progress made on when the talks would resume.

Top American nuclear negotiator Christopher Hill speaks to the media after arriving at Beijing airport Monday 27 Nov. 2006
Top American nuclear negotiator Christopher Hill speaks to the media after arriving at Beijing airport Monday 27 Nov. 2006
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill gave no indication that any progress was made during the two days of talks.

Speaking very briefly with reporters Wednesday evening, he said he would leave Beijing Thursday, with no follow-up meetings planned with the North Koreans.

Hill, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei, and North Korean Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan were supposed to lay the foundation for re-launching the negotiations, which have been stalled for more than a year.

A statement by the Chinese Foreign Ministry said the three men had held both bilateral and trilateral discussions.

North Korea began boycotting the six-party negotiations after the United States imposed financial sanctions on Pyongyang. Re-starting the talks have been given a new urgency following North Korea's nuclear test last month.

South Korea's Yonhap wire service and Japan's Kyodo news agency quoted sources at the talks as saying Kim set preconditions for dismantling its nuclear weapons program: that the United States lift its restrictions on some of North Korea's overseas bank accounts, and bring about an end to the United Nations sanctions imposed on Pyongyang after the nuclear test.

South Korea and Japan, as well as Russia, are also members of the six-party negotiations.

Peter Beck, a Seoul-based analyst for the International Crisis Group, says such demands reduce the chances of the talks resuming.

"…The signals that North Korea is sending is that…they're really not interested in compromising, that they want everything and then they'll talk about giving up their programs, and that's unfortunately going to be a non-starter, so it's hard to be optimistic," he said.

The United States insists North Korea should, without conditions, abide by the agreement in principle it made at last year's talks, to abandon all nuclear weapons in exchange for political, economic and security incentives.

Beck, however, says now that the North is a nuclear power, it might hold out for additional concessions.

"Given what they've been saying publicly and what they've been telling their own people, they're quite pleased and proud to be a nuclear power, and they're not going to give that up easily unless they get a lot more in return than they were being offered in the past," he said.

Hill assured Kim last month that Washington will address North Korea's concerns about the financial restrictions once the talks resume.

 

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