US chief negotiator to the fourth-round Korean nuclear issue
talks, Christopher Hill, said a lot of progress had been made in
the 13-day talks though differences remained in Beijing on
Sunday.
"During the last 13 days, we were able to achieve a lot of
consensus on some issues, I thought we had made a lot of progress,"
said Hill after the parties decided to put the negotiation into
recess.
"We decided the best thing to do is to put the talks into
recess," said Hill.
The fourth round of the six-party talks, which involves China,
North Korea, the United States, South Korea, Russia and Japan,
failed to come up with a highly-anticipated joint document before a
three-week recess was announced.
China, the host of the six-nation talks, issued a chairman's
statement Sunday, saying the next phase of the talks will resume in
the week beginning Aug. 29 this year, with the exact date to beset
through consultations among the six.
Hill attributed the recess to the remaining differences between
North Korea and the United States. "We were not able to finish the
job, not able to bridge remaining gaps."
However, the US assistant secretary of state was optimistic
about a possible joint document in the next stage. "There is real
logic to try to reach an agreement, logic to everyone. I'm still
hopeful we can automatically arrive at that."
"I think the Chinese draft is an excellent basis for reaching an
agreement," said Hill, adding that the Chinese have done what they
could do to help achieve the goal of denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula.
"If we can get an agreement at the end of August, quickly
thereafter in September we will move to the next stage ...the
so-called fifth round of the six-party talks we would anticipate
starting at very early fall," Hill said.
(Xinhua News Agency August 7, 2005)