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China-Japan-Koreas |
U.S., Partners End N. Korea Nuke Project |
2005-11-23 |
The United States and its partners on Tuesday dealt the death blow to a project to build two light-water atomic reactors for North Korea to entice it into dismantling its nuclear weapons program, officials said. The decade-old light-water reactor project had been mothballed for the last two years, kept barely alive in case North Korea showed signs of resuming International Atomic Energy Agency inspections and liquidating its ambitious self-proclaimed nuclear weapons program. The New York-based Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization, also known as KEDO, did not issue any formal statement at the end of a two-day session of executive board meetings Tuesday. But the U.S. delegate, Ambassador Joseph DiTrani, said after the meeting that the board members - the United States, South Korea, Japan and European Union - had agreed on the ``termination'' of the light-water reactor project, KEDO spokesman Brian Kremer confirmed. Charles Kartman, the American who was executive director of KEDO from 2001 until this August, said North Korea must have anticipated KEDO's demise. ``There's no surprise here for North Korea. They've been setting up their obstacles'' for weeks and in September had revived their demand for the reactors, Kartman said. At the end of the fourth round of six-way talks in September, North Korea pledged in principle to disarm but maintained that it would need light-water reactors to provide electricity beforehand. Fulfilling that demand would postpone effective disarmament for several years. At a summit of Asian and Pacific leaders last week, President Bush said no reactors would be considered before the North gives up its nuclear weapons program. Under the agreement that formed the KEDO project, North Korea was to abandon nuclear weapons development and allow access by International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors, in exchange for 500,000 tons of heavy fuel oil annually from the United States to meet its energy shortage until it got the two light-water atomic power plants, built and paid for primarily by South Korea and Japan, with some EU funding. The program was frozen in 2002 after the United States claimed North Korea had embarked on a second, secret weapons-development program. |
Posted by:Steve White |
#6 We should not give the Norks anything in aid until the present regime falls and some kind of government that is concerned for its citizens replaces it. The sooner Kimmie and Co is gone, the faster the North Korean people can be aided and saved. |
Posted by: Alaska Paul 2005-11-23 22:02 |
#5 Trying the links again Isomer Wars New nukes in the making Nuke Archive |
Posted by: 3dc 2005-11-23 17:42 |
#4 No idea why I couldn't paste the links... |
Posted by: 3dc 2005-11-23 17:38 |
#3 Thorium reactors are possible. (Some research ones have existed. Bombs might be possible.) href="http://www2.rnw.nl/rnw/en/features/science/031027isomer.html?view=Standard">Isomer wars Tapping the power of isomers Induced Gamma Emission, IGE href="http://www2.rnw.nl/rnw/en/currentaffairs/region/internationalorganisations/iso031024.html">New nukes in the making The FAS guide is here: href="http://nuclearweaponarchive.org/">Nuclear Weapon Archive |
Posted by: 3dc 2005-11-23 17:37 |
#2 In Kimmy's Co Kola? |
Posted by: Shipman 2005-11-23 07:20 |
#1 One word: Thorium. Any questions? |
Posted by: Zenster 2005-11-23 03:51 |