North Korea will continue to pursue peaceful nuclear program in
its own way whether the United States would provide it with a
light-water reactor or not, said spokesman for the North Korean
delegation Hyun Hak Bong Friday.
He said at a press briefing Friday evening that North Korea has
offered to accept joint management of the light-water nuclear
reactor once it is built for the sake of building mutual trust and
taking into consideration the concerns of the United States.
North Korea's position in the six-party talks is that it will
"completely give up" its nuclear weapons on the condition that
N.Korea -US ties are normalized, mutual trust is established and
North Korea is free from US nuclear threat, he said.
He said according to the 1994 Agreed Framework between the two
sides, the United States offers North Korea light-water reactors,
while North Korea freezes its nuclear programs.
"However, the Bush Administration abandoned the agreement and
listed North Korea as part of 'an axis of evil' and a target of its
preemptive actions." he said. Under such circumstances, North Korea
opted to withdraw from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT)
for defending itself, he added.
The spokesman said North Korea has demonstrated its sincerity by
taking part in the six-way nuclear talks and clarifying the target
of Korean Peninsula denuclearization.
"However, the United States demanded that North Korea disarm and
give up its nuclear deterrence for self-defensive purpose at first,
which North Korea can never accept," he said.
The six parties, China, North Korea, the United States, the
Republic of Korea, Russia and Japan, reopened the fourth round of
talks in the Chinese capital Tuesday after a five-week recess.
Chief Russian negotiator Alexander Alexeyev said Friday
afternoon a joint document may come out Saturday from the on-going
six-party talks.
(Xinhua News Agency September 17, 2005)