Six-party talks on DPRK's nuclear program ended on Saturday in
Beijing, with all participants promising to push ahead with
diplomatic efforts. The host, China, said that a third round of
talks will begin no later than the end of June.
This round, lasting four days, ended without a major
breakthrough, but a US official declared it "very successful."
The disappointed DPRK criticized the United States, saying
that Washington wasn't willing to make compromise and reach a
settlement.
The United States, DPRK and other governments agreed to
hold more senior-level talks before July and form a lower-level
working group to handle details of solving the 16-month-old
dispute, China announced.
The six nations failed to agree on the US demand that Pyongyang
abandon its nuclear program entirely.
The DPRK's delegate, Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye-gwan, said he
saw no "positive result" from the four-day meeting, the second
round of six-nation talks organized by China. A first round in last
August produced no substantive results.
"The US delegation did not have an attitude to resolve the
nuclear issue through peaceful negotiations," Kim said at a news
conference.
The talks ended on a discordant note when the governments failed
to issue a planned joint statement. Instead, the host China issued
a "Statement of the Chairman".
Still, a US official said the atmosphere of two one-on-one
meetings between the American and DPRK delegations was "much
better" than during the previous round of talks.
"The event has exceeded my expectations," said the senior
official, who spoke to a group of reporters on condition of
anonymity. However, he added: "The devil is in the details."
Other participants in the talks were the Republic of Korea
(ROK), Japan and Russia. The ROK said it was "satisfied"
with the talks. Russia, in a statement from Moscow, said the talks
were "useful."
Washington repeatedly has demanded the comprehensive dismantling
of the DPRK's nuclear program, refusing to grant concessions if
Pyongyang freezes the program but does not abolish it.
The DPRK says it won't give up nuclear activities that aren't
related to weapons.
"The parties did not have consensus on this proposal or the
scope of the DPRK's giving up nuclear weapons," said Wang Yi, the
Chinese delegate and a vice foreign minister.
However, he said, the DPRK "made clear its readiness"
to give up its weapons program "once the United States gives up its
so-called 'hostile policy' toward the DPRK."
The United States affirmed that had "no hostile intent" against
the DPRK. "It has no intention to invade or attack the DPRK," Wang
said. "It has no intention to seek regime change."
The governments established what they called a framework to
continue diplomatic work. Even before the talks started Wednesday,
China warned that the dispute couldn't be solved in a single round
of meetings.
After conflict foiled the planned joint statement, China issued
what it called a closing "chairman's statement." Wang, who read it
out at a news conference, appealed to reporters not to dwell on
disagreements.
"There are plenty of them, which is an objective fact," he said.
"I suggest you pay more attention to the positive."
Nevertheless, he acknowledged, "The main reason for these
differences is the extreme lack of trust."
(China Daily February 29, 2004)