Top US negotiator at the six-party talks Christopher Hill said
on Wednesday that the disarmament negotiations scheduled for next
week will be "very tough."
Hill, who is also Assistant Secretary of State, said that there
were no guarantees the process would achieve its goal of
dismantling North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
Noting "I'm not here to predict success or express optimism," Hill
said that North Korea has indicated it is ready to "deal in
specifics at the coming round."
Hill has held two rounds of preliminary talks with officials of
North Korea since Pyongyang agreed to return to the negotiating
table after carrying out their first test of a nuclear bomb on Oct.
9.
The six-party talks have remained stalled since North Korea
walked out of the negotiations with the United States, South Korea,
China, Japan and Russia more than a year ago.
Washington has urged Pyongyang to take "concrete actions" in the
forthcoming round of six-party talk. "It is our desire to make
progress in terms of parties committing at this round to concrete
actions and then quickly thereafter following through on these
commitments," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said on
Monday.
The six-party talks, involving North Korea, the United States.,
South Korea, China, Japan and Russia, is due to resume in Beijing,
China on Dec. 18 after its last session in November 2005.
North Korea agreed in principle to dismantle its nuclear weapons
at the September 2005 round of talks but boycotted the meeting
following US financial sanctions imposed on Pyongyang.
Washington has been pressing Pyongyang to halt the operations of
its nuclear reactor in Yongbyon and accept inspections of the
International Atomic Energy Agency but the latter demands the
former first lift its financial sanctions as a show of good
faith.
(Xinhua News Agency December 14, 2006)