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NUKEWARS
Republicans criticize US, N. Korea deal
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 29, 2012

NKorea's nuclear halt is 'modest, first step': Clinton
Washington (AFP) Feb 29, 2012 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Wednesday that North Korea's decision to halt its nuclear program is a "modest first step" after the death in December of leader Kim Jong-Il.

"The United States ...still has profound concerns," Clinton told US lawmakers after North Korea agreed to a moratorium on nuclear and missile tests and a suspension of its uranium enrichment work.

"But on the occasion of Kim Jong-Il's death, I said that it is our hope that the new leadership will choose to guide their nation onto the path of peace by living up to its obligations," the chief US diplomat said.

"Today's announcement represents a modest first step in the right direction," Clinton said. "We of course will be watching closely and judging North Korea's new leaders by their actions."

Kim was succeeded by son Kim Jong-Un, who is believed to be in his late 20s.


Republican lawmakers Wednesday criticized President Barack Obama and warned that North Korea was not to be trusted after it promised to suspend its nuclear program in exchange for US food aid.

Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, head of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and a staunch critic of communist countries, said that the North Korea agreement "sounds a lot like the failed agreements of the past."

"North Korea's promise to suspend certain nuclear activities can't be taken at face value, given the almost certain existence of several undeclared nuclear facilities," she said in a statement.

"Pyongyang will likely continue its clandestine nuclear weapons program right under our noses. We have bought this bridge several times before."

North Korea, which kicked out inspectors from the UN International Atomic Energy Agency in 2009, said Wednesday that it would allow them to return to monitor a new moratorium on uranium enrichment.

The communist state also said that it would suspend nuclear and missile tests. The US State Department praised the "important, if limited, progress" and said it would move ahead on providing nutritional assistance.

A senior US official said that the United States rejected requests for rice and grains and instead would provide, under tight monitoring, items such as oil and ready-to-eat meals for children and expectant mothers.

Representative Ed Royce, a Republican who has long sought more pressure on North Korea, said that the death in December of longtime leader Kim Jong-Il should have prompted a "rethink" in policy toward the authoritarian state.

"Years of getting duped by North Korea should tell us that verification on their turf is extremely difficult, if not impossible," said Royce, who heads a House subcommittee on non-proliferation.

"That applies to food aid distribution, where the military has stolen food aid, or nuclear disarmament," he said.

Royce last year authored a measure to bar any food aid to North Korea, arguing that it would benefit the regime by allowing it to spend money on nuclear weapons. The Republican-led House approved the ban in June.

But a final version reached after consultation with the Senate, which is led by Obama's Democratic Party, was less rigid and prohibited food aid to countries without adequate monitoring for misuse.

Senator John Kerry, a Democrat who heads the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said that nutritional assistance "is the right thing to do if we can ensure our aid will reach those in need."

He said that a freeze of nuclear activities and return of inspectors "would be a very positive development."

"These may be the green shoots of progress from careful engagement," Kerry added.

IAEA welcomes N. Korea nuclear moratorium
Vienna (AFP) Feb 29, 2012 - The head of the UN atomic agency, Yukiya Amano, welcomed Wednesday North Korea's announcement that it will suspend nuclear tests and its uranium enrichment programme as an "important step forward".

"The announcement by the United States about its recent talks with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is an important step forward," the International Atomic Energy Agency chief said in a statement.

"As I have said before, the agency has an essential role to play in verifying the DPRK's (North Korea's) nuclear programme.

"Pending further details, we stand ready to return to (the nuclear site at) Yongbyon to undertake monitoring activities upon request and with the agreement of the agency's board of governors."

North Korea's new leadership said earlier it has agreed to suspend nuclear tests and to allow the IAEA to monitor a moratorium on uranium enrichment.

The enrichment programme, first disclosed in November 2010, could give the communist state a second way to make atomic weapons in addition to its longstanding plutonium programme.

North Korea, which has conducted two nuclear tests, kicked out IAEA inspectors in 2009 and is suspected of supplying equipment, materials and know-how to Syria and Libya.

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US aid to N.Korea to focus on children, pregnant
Washington (AFP) Feb 29, 2012 - US assistance to North Korea, announced as part of a major deal on Wednesday, will focus on supplies for children and pregnant women and will be subject to strict monitoring, US officials said.

The United States said Wednesday it would provide 240,000 metric tons of nutritional assistance to the communist state, which promised to halt its nuclear activities including uranium enrichment and to allow in UN inspectors.

US officials said that the aid would include a corn-soy blend, pulses, vegetable oil and ready-to-eat therapeutic meals all designed for children under five or six years old or expectant mothers.

"These are people whom the regime either cannot or has chosen not to feed," a senior US official told reporters on condition of anonymity.

The official said that until a meeting last week in Beijing, "the North Koreans had declined to allow the program to go forward. They demanded large quantities of rice and grain that could be, in our view, diverted to elites or the military."

Officials in President Barack Obama's administration said that the North Koreans eventually backed down and agreed to tight monitoring of the aid, which some lawmakers of the rival Republican Party strongly oppose.

If fully implemented, "this will be the most comprehensively monitored and managed program since the US began assistance to (North Korea) in the mid-1990s," another administration official said.

The second official said that the United States was ready to send aid as soon as it can hold another meeting with North Korea and set up offices in the isolated country to process the aid.

"Our partner organizations will have to be fully operational -- meaning fully in place on the ground, with their offices functioning -- before the food will begin to arrive and begin to be distributed," he said.

"It's very important that we can demonstrate that the program is well-managed, because it's critical to maintaining the support for the program," he said.



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NUKEWARS
US commander admits conditions on N. Korea aid
Washington (AFP) Feb 28, 2012
A US commander acknowledged Wednesday that Washington has linked food aid to North Korea to progress on military issues, saying that the impoverished communist state needs to halt its nuclear program. The US State Department has repeatedly denied it is tying politics to North Korea's requests for food and insisted it is only assessing humanitarian needs, amid reports by Christian aid groups ... read more


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