The United States said on Friday that North Korea should
dismantle its nuclear weapons programs and should not retain a
civilian nuclear capability as well.
The remark came after Christopher Hill, top US envoy to the
six-party talks currently being held in Beijing, suggested that
Washington could be willing to allow the North the peaceful use of
atomic power if the North rejoined the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty (NPT).
North Korea withdrew from the NPT in 2003.
"We don't challenge the fact that they have the rights to this
under the treaty, but we challenge whether they should be
exercising these rights," Hill told reporters in Beijing on
Friday.
However, Sean McCormack, a State Department spokesman, said on
Friday that Hill was clear that the North should not be allowed to
retain civilian nuclear capability.
"I think he was very clear and we're very clear that we do not
think that North Korea should retain a civilian nuclear
capability," McCormack said, stressing that the US goal is to
achieve a denuclearized Korean Peninsula.
"We've seen North Korea in terms of the 1991 agreement, the NPT,
the 1994 Agreed Framework, in which they have not lived up to their
nuclear obligations. So any nuclear program in North Korea could
potentially be a nuclear weapons program," he said.
(Xinhua News Agency July 30, 2005)