The third round of six-party talks has witnessed progress after
three days of consultation with the positive comments from the
United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)
on each other's plan for solving the nuclear issue.
Heads of delegations to the six-party talks on Korean peninsular
nuclear issue said in Beijing Friday that the talks have gained
positive momentum and they are ready for further rounds of talks in
the future.
DPRK spokesman Hyun Hak-bong said that the DPRK maintains that
nuclear freezing means no more production, transfer or test of the
nuclear weapons, and the targets of the nuclear freezing includes
all equipment related to nuclear weapons and all materials
distilled after processing.
The DPRK will not only freeze, but also dismantle these nuclear
equipment under mature condition, he said, noting that the DPRK
needs a great political courage to put forward such a nuclear
freezing proposal.
The DPRK will show flexibility over the issues such as the
requirements to remove the DPRK from the list of supporting
terrorism countries and to eliminate sanctions and blockage towards
the DPRK if the United States and other countries practically
participate in providing energy aid to the DPRK, Hyun said.
The US delegation said the US side expects further talks
although "no breakthrough" has been achieved in this round. A
senior official with the US delegation said some follow-up work has
been discussed on Friday in bilateral and multilateral meetings,
concerning the next round of talks and the responsibility of the
working groups.
"We might have one back quite soon to have our working group
working," said the official.
The US and DPRK sides have reacted positively to each other's
proposals. DPRK described the US plan as "constructive" while the
US side said the DPRK proposal is "more specific" than the one
raised in the previous round of the talks.
The DPRK delegation has made it clear in its proposal to freeze
its nuclear program for compensation, and they also has made it
clear that this is the first step on the path to nuclear
dismantlement, said the US official, adding "that's very positive
indeed".
In the first day of this round of six-party talks, the US
delegation offered a seven-page proposal, which includes a
three-month preparatory period for the DPRK to dismantle its
nuclear programs, during which the DPRK would freeze work on its
nuclear programs, submit a list of all nuclear activities.
The US proposal also promised conditional energy aid and
security guarantee to the DPRK if its nuclear programs are
dismantled.
Sources said that in the closed-door consultations held Friday
among delegation heads, political consensus was achieved to welcome
the starting of nuclear freezing, as the first step of nuclear
dismantlement, as soon as possible while relevant measures are
adopted as well.
The delegations have expressed readiness to continue work under
the current six-party-talk framework for the final solution to the
problem.
The talks, involving China, the DPRK, the United States, the
ROK, Russia and Japan, will be closed as scheduled on Saturday.
Chinese delegation member Zhang Qiyue said there would be no
closing ceremony since "the talks have become mechanized", and
"there is no need to have opening and closing ceremonies for every
round of the talks". But she noted that the consensus reached in
this round of talks should be recorded in written form.
"The chance for peace has appeared, and it is most important for
all parties to fully demonstrate their political will with a
flexible and pragmatic attitude," said Chinese delegation head Wang
Yi.
"Then we would overcome the difficulties and blaze a trail for
solution to the nuclear issue," he said.
(Xinhua News Agency June 26, 2004)