China: U.S. Nuclear Proposal Delivered


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South Korea tried to bolster hopes for a breakthrough in the North Korean nuclear crisis recently, as China confirmed delivery of a pivotal U.S.-backed plan for easing tensions to North Korea.

The United States, Japan and South Korea presented a blueprint for ending the standoff to China, which is playing the role of mediator, earlier this week but a report recently said Beijing found the plan unacceptable and never bothered relaying it.

However recently, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said the proposal was delivered to Pyongyang.

``We hope all parties can cherish every bit of hard-reached consensus so the next round of six-party talks can reconvene as soon as possible,'' Liu said at a regular briefing.

Liu did not say when the proposal had been delivered, nor whether North Korea had responded.

South Korea expects a clearer picture on the possibility of renewed six-nation talks on North Korea's nuclear weapons program to emerge when a European Union delegation comes to South Korea on Friday after a three-day visit to North Korea.

``We will need to wait a day or two to make an accurate judgment on the prospects of future talks,'' Wie Sung-rak, director-general of Foreign Ministry's North American Affairs Bureau, said recently. South Korea's Deputy Foreign Minister Lee Soo-hyuck also was to visit China on Friday in the hope arranging the next round of talks before the end of year, his office said. Lee was South Korea's chief delegate to the first round of six-nation talks in August.

The nine-member EU delegation held ``political dialogue'' with officials from North Korea's Foreign Ministry, the North's official KCNA news agency said Thursday. The two sides discussed ``matters of mutual concern including bilateral relations,'' it said without elaborating.

Details of the U.S.-backed proposal were unclear, but media have reported that it seeks the complete, verifiable and irrevocable dismantling of the North's atomic weapons program and security assurances for Pyongyang.

North Korea offered recently to freeze its nuclear weapons activities if the United States provided energy aid and removed Pyongyang from a list of countries that sponsor terrorism, but Unification Minister Jeong Se-hyun said it wasn't clear if that was in response to the U.S. proposal. President Bush rejected the offer.

North Korea said it was responding to ``what is now afloat and what we hear'' and that it was disappointed in the U.S. stand.

Jeong was hopeful about the possibility of a second-round of six-nation over North Korea's nuclear weapons programs this month.

``North Korea is saying that it will make those demands when the talks open. I think North Korea is expressing its strong willingness to hold talks,'' he said. ``I think there is still hope.''

Meanwhile, Jeong said he could not confirm reported activities at North Korea's main nuclear facility in Yongbyon.

South Korea's major JoongAng Ilbo newspaper reported that a U.S. intelligence satellite spotted vapor and fumes coming from the nuclear site, and that Washington and Seoul were trying to analyze whether Pyongyang was reprocessing spent fuel rods to extract weapons-grade plutonium.

``I do not have information at this point to say anything definitely,'' Jeong said.

North Korea previously claimed that it had reprocessed all of its 8,000 spent fuel rods -- a key step in making atomic bombs. U.S. officials believe North Korea already has one or two nuclear bombs.

The North Korean nuclear crisis flared in October last year, when U.S. officials said the communist state admitted running a new nuclear weapons program using enriched uranium in violation of international agreements.

North Korea says its has restarted its frozen 5-megawatt reactor at Yongbyon, 50 miles north of Pyongyang, after it kicked out U.N. nuclear inspectors and quit the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty in January.

Experts have said it would take a year of operation before the reactor can produce enough to make a new weapon.

The United States and its allies seek to persuade North Korea to end the nuclear programs through the six-nation talks.

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