North Korea says nuclear reactor is off

The Baltimore Sun

North Korea told the United States yesterday that it had shut down its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon and readmitted a permanent international inspection team, completing its first step toward reversing a four-year-long confrontation with the United States during which North Korea has made fuel for a small but potent arsenal of nuclear weapons.

North Korea sent the announcement through the country's small mission to the United Nations at 9:30 a.m. yesterday, said Christopher R. Hill, the U.S. assistant secretary of state who negotiated the accord to close the reactor that was agreed to in February. The reactor shutdown comes nine months after North Korea conducted a nuclear test, but it is unclear whether the country has mastered the ability to deliver or sell a working nuclear weapon.

The North Korean claim, which was carefully synchronized with the arrival of a first shipment of fuel oil from South Korea, can be easily verified by the 10-member inspection team from the International Atomic Energy Agency, though communications are slow from the bleak, heavily guarded nuclear site at Yongbyon, roughly 60 miles north of Pyongyang, North Korea's capital.

Loaded with equipment, the inspectors arrived there yesterday to begin supervising what is envisioned as a lengthy disarmament plan and to rebuild a surveillance system that was dismantled when they were expelled four years ago. U.S. spy satellites will also be able to detect whether the reactor core is cooling; confirmation could take several days.

The next critical steps required under the accord, Hill has said, could take until the end of the year. North Korea, in return for large shipments of additional fuel oil, is to permanently disable the reactor so that it can no longer produce plutonium for additional nuclear weapons. Before it reaches that step, North Korea is supposed to issue a complete declaration of all of its nuclear assets -- including how many weapons it may have produced since it expelled inspectors in 2003.

"Declaration is one of the early next steps," Hill said in Tokyo before the notification of the shutdown. "We would expect a comprehensive list, declaration, to be in a matter of several weeks, possibly a couple of months. We see it as coming before disabling of the facilities."

He cautioned that the shutdown was "just the first step." Verifying the declaration will be difficult, because for now the inspectors are limited to the Yongbyon complex.

Still, for President Bush the announcement is a rare diplomatic victory for an administration besieged on many fronts. In recent weeks, the rising congressional demands for a date to begin the withdrawal from Iraq, the struggle to keep al-Qaida and the Taliban from expanding new footholds in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and an expanding nuclear challenge from Iran and revived tensions with Moscow have created a sense in Washington and around the world that Bush is seriously weakened.

But the shutdown of the reactor and the return of the inspectors will enable Bush to argue that his five-year strategy of rejecting North Korea's calls for bilateral talks and insisting on negotiations that included North Korea's neighbors -- China, Japan, South Korea and Russia -- is finally bearing fruit.

Though critical and long-awaited, the reactor shutdown may also be the easiest achievement. It essentially restores the status quo that existed in 2002 -- except that now North Korea is believed to have enough plutonium fuel for eight or more weapons, in addition to the one or two they are believed to have manufactured when the elder George Bush was president.

The challenge now, which experts and former negotiators believe will be far more difficult, is to persuade North Korea to reveal and disgorge its arsenal. Almost all of that was produced starting in 2003, while the United States was distracted by the invasion of Iraq and its aftermath.

The February accord commits North Korea to eventually ridding itself of that fuel or the weapons it may have been turned into. But it sets no deadlines, and getting North Korea to take those steps will require subsequent negotiation.

"I could imagine that the next steps could extend beyond this administration," William J. Perry, a Clinton administration defense secretary who conducted talks with North Korea in late 1990s, said in an interview in his office at Stanford University on Friday. "And the North Koreans will demand a pretty high price for that."

North Korea meets its negotiating partners again in Beijing on July 18, and in a statement yesterday the State Department said that it planned to use the session "to make rapid progress in implementing the next phase set forth in the Feb. 13 agreement."

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