Heads of delegations to the fourth-round of six-party talks
concluded their meeting Saturday, agreeing to have discussions on a
joint document which indicates the talks having entered a new
stage.
Prior to this, the Chinese delegation held one-on-one talks with
the delegations of the United States and the North Korea,
respectively.
According to a source from the delegation of South Korea, China has
proposed a draft of the common document to other five parties,
hoping agreement could be reached.
"We will have a lot of discussion about the text, and see if we can
come to some agreement today," said Christopher Hill, head of the
US delegation, on Saturday when he left his hotel.
"But I want to let you know it will take a while and can not be
finished within a day," said Hill. "This is a very difficult
negotiation."
In the past four days, the participant nations of the six-party
talks further understand each other's positions and the drafting of
the common document would help talks "enter into a new stage," said
a Japanese official Friday evening.
It was also reported by the South Korea media that the common
document will reaffirm a 1992 inter-Korean pledge to make the
peninsula nuclear-free.
Under the 1992 South-North denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula, the South and North Korea pledged not to test, produce,
store, deploy or use nuclear weapons.
According to some foreign media prediction, the common document
will also include addressing North Korea's security concern, the
normalization of diplomatic relations between North Korea and
the US and Japan, economic cooperation and other issues of common
concern.
Liu Jiangyong, a professor on the international relations with
China's prestigious Tsinghua University, said in an interview with
Xinhua that the discussion on the common document may last for
days, or even a week.
The best the solution to the Korean nuclear issue is to reach a
packaged resolution act, and the least is to continue the six-party
talks framework, Liu said.
Liu also predicted that the final document could have "one version
but two levels," explaining that the concerned parties would state
their consensus and raise difference in the common document.
In addition, the expert also pointed out that the US and the North
Korea still have different views on the definition on the "nuclear
free," which needs the two sides to make compromise to reach
agreement.
(Xinhua News Agency July 31, 2005)