North Korea Agrees to Nuclear Moratorium

Daily News Article   —   Posted on March 1, 2012

NOTE ON NORTH KOREA:

  • After decades of economic mismanagement and resource misallocation, North Korea since the mid-1990s has relied heavily on international aid to feed its population while continuing to expend resources to maintain an army of approximately 1 million soldiers.
  • North Korea’s history of regional military provocations, proliferation of military-related items, and long-range missile development – as well as its nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons programs and massive conventional armed forces – are of major concern to the international community. [Kim Jong-il was an oppressive dictator who forced his people to call him “Dear Leader”]

(by Jay Solomon in Washington DC and Evan Ramstad in Seoul, South Korea, The Wall Street Journal, WSJ.com) – North Korea has agreed to freeze the development of its nuclear-weapons arsenal and long-range missile program and allow international inspectors to return, a potentially significant gesture aimed at improving bilateral relations with the U.S., the State Department said Wednesday.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un, center, visits an army unit in this undated picture released by the North Korean army this week.

In turn, the Obama administration has agreed to move forward with distributing 240,000 metric tons of food aid to the isolated Communist state and publicly stated that Washington isn’t seeking to overthrow the government of North Korea’s new leader, Kim Jong Eun.

The deal, confirmed by North Korea’s official news agency, KCNA, was greeted both with relief over the possibility of progress, and a degree of skepticism because of North Korea’s record of accepting international aid without adhering to agreements.

“Years of getting duped by North Korea should tell us that verification on their turf is extremely difficult, if not impossible,” said Rep. Ed Royce (R., Calif.), a longtime critic of U.S. policy toward Pyongyang [the capital of North Korea – refers to the North Korean government]. “That applies to food-aid distribution, where the military has stolen food aid, or nuclear disarmament.”

The State Department said the agreement followed two days of talks between the U.S. and North Korea last week in Beijing, which received little fanfare at the time, and which U.S. officials over the weekend said had yielded little progress. It marked the first direct encounter between Washington and Pyongyang since the death of Mr. Kim’s father, long-serving North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il, in December.

The U.S. stressed the agreement with the North marked only a “limited” gain in improving relations between the historical cold war foes. But they also said it could amount to an important step in countering the North Korean proliferation* threat. [*proliferation is to increase the number of nuclear weapons]

“The United States still has profound concerns regarding North Korean behavior across a wide range of areas, but today’s announcement reflects important, if limited, progress in addressing some of these,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said in a statement.

The agreement appears to answer the main condition set by the U.S. for the resumption of the aid-for-disarmament process known as the six-party talks, which was that North Korea demonstrate a sense of seriousness about its state willingness to re-enter that process. North Korea formally abandoned the talks, which also involve China, Japan, Russia and South Korea, in 2009 to protest United Nations penalties following a long-range missile test [they conducted]. …

Konstantin Kosachev, a senior Russian parliamentarian from the main pro-Kremlin party said: “We’ll need to be patient to be sure whether these are really positive moves in the policy of the new North Korean leadership or just the latest game on the part of Pyongyang to attain its goals,” he said.

The U.S. and North Korea notably did not agree on another condition sought by Washington to move ahead with the talks: an end to hostilities between North and South Korea. North Korea has been angry at South Korea since 2008, when the South ended its few-questions-asked aid policy that provided [the North] with nearly $1 billion annually. In 2010, Pyongyang sank a South Korean warship and fired rockets on an South-controlled island, though it denies involvement in the sinking, [and] in [the] attacks that killed 50 South Koreans. …

[Ms. Nuland of the State Department] added that North Korea had specifically agreed to a moratorium on nuclear-weapons and long-range missile tests and to freeze the nuclear activities at its Yongbyon facility north of Pyongyang, including the enrichment of uranium. She said that Pyongyang has also agreed to allow inspectors from the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, to return to Yongbyon after a multiyear absence.

However, because uranium enrichment* can occur in multiple locations, the agreement didn’t appear to include a way for the U.S. and other outsiders to verify Pyongyang was not proceeding with a uranium program, which it revealed to a U.S. scientist in 2010. [*Enriched uranium is used to make nuclear weapons.]

In a joint statement agreed to with Pyongyang, the Obama administration formally stated that the U.S. “reaffirms that it does not have hostile intent toward [North Korea] and is prepared to take steps to improve our bilateral relationship in the spirit of mutual respect for sovereignty and equality.”

As part of the agreement, North Korea accepted the amount of food assistance the U.S. had been offering in talks the two countries held last year before the death of Kim Jong Il. Just after Kim Jong Eun took charge, North Korea issued a media statement pressing the U.S. to provide up to 500,000 tons and saying it doubted “the U.S. will for confidence-building.”

The Jan. 11 statement indicated that a deal was on the table for North Korea to halt its uranium-enrichment program in return for food and a suspension of other U.S. sanctions. The [Obama administration] for months has insisted there were no links between food assistance and its effort to curtail North Korea’s pursuit of weapons of mass destruction.

—Gregory L. White in Moscow contributed to this article.

Copyright 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reprinted here for educational purposes only. Visit the website at wsj.com.



Background

NUCLEAR NON-PROLIFERATION TREATY:
Under the United Nation's NPT (Non Proliferation Treaty), countries are not allowed to make nuclear weapons (except for the 5 that had nuclear weapons prior to the treaty - the U.S., Russia, China, France, the United Kingdom).  Safeguards are used to verify compliance with the Treaty through inspections conducted by the UN's IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency). 

NORTH KOREA'S NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROGRAM and THE SIX-PARTY TALKS: (portions of this informaiton are from wikipedia.org.)

Also, go to wsj.com for a graph detailing negotiations with North Korea.