U.S., N.Korea seek compromise in nuclear deadlock

U.S., N.Korea seek compromise in

By HYUNG-, AP

SEOUL, –– The United States and are being flexible in their effo

rt to reach a compromise to resolve the dispute in the North’s process, ’s foreign minister said Tuesday.

The North stopped disabling its main in mid-August, rejecting a U.S. insistence that the regime should undergo a thorough inspection of its declaration of . Washington’s top nuclear envoy visited last week to resolve the impasse, but it was unclear whether it produced any breakthrough.

But on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Yu Myung-hwan told a South Korean that Washington and were trying to strike a compromise by exerting “flexibility” and “considerably reflecting each other’s position.”

However, Yu said he believes the U.S. would not make any in its demand for a rigorous . He did not elaborate.

Yu said the were at an “important crossroad” as it would be U.S. President George W. Bush’s last chance to resolve the issue before he leaves office in January. But he said the North’s suspension of disablement work posed “a serious obstacle.”

Yu also said the U.S., and other countries involved in the were expected to announce their positions on the latest dispute in a few days, after reviewing details of U.S. envoy Christopher Hill’s trip to the North.

began disabling its main nuclear complex north of last November as part of an aid-for-disarmament pact with the U.S., , China, Russia and Japan. The North, however, stopped the disablement work and began reassembling the facilities in protest at Washington’s refusal to remove it from a blacklist of .

The U.S. pledged to remove the North from the blacklist after the regime submitted a long-delayed account of its in June. The U.S. later insisted the North would only be taken off the list after it agreed to an international inspection of its nuclear declaration.

News Topics Related Posts :

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply