"In February, North Korea declared for the first time that it was a
nuclear weapons state. It said it had re-processed 8,000 fuel rods,
turning them into weapons fuel." 
"There has long been a dispute about a second nuclear program, one the
United States alleges that North Korea began in the 1990's, when the
Yongbyon plant was "frozen" under a 1994 accord. That program, the
United States alleges, aims at producing enriched uranium, a process
easier to hide than producing plutonium. American officials, who first
told North Korea that they had evidence of the program in 2002, say
North Korea initially admitted to it."

U.S. OFFERS NORTH KOREA EVIDENCE THAT NUCLEAR SECRETS CAME FROM
PAKISTANI'S NETWORK
►
www.nytimes.com/2005/07/29/politics/29korea.html?ex=1123473600&en=e3776ca50ab99628&ei=5070&emc=eta1

► The New York Times / by David E Sanger and Jim Yardley

Jul 31 2005 ► Jul 28. In negotiations with North Korea this week, the
Bush administration has for the first time presented the country with
specific evidence behind American allegations that North Korea
secretly obtained uranium enrichment technology from a founder of
Pakistan's nuclear program, two senior ad-ministration officials said.
The decision to share the intelligence with North Korean negotiators,
the officials said, was part of an ef-fort to convince North Korea
that any discussions about disarmament must cover not only the nuclear
weapons program it has boasted about, but a second one that it now
denies exists.
Putting on the table the evidence that North Korea obtained technology
from the network built by Abdul Qadeer Khan is significant because it
is an effort to break an impasse over the scope of North Korea's
nuclear program.
American officials were reluctant to describe the North Korean
response, but one official said that when presented with the evidence
- chiefly the testimony of Mr. Khan - "they argue with us about it." 
American officials have never made public the details of Mr. Khan's
statements to Pakistani officials, who have declined to make him
available for direct interrogation. But they have shared the
information widely with Asian allies, and elements of it have leaked
out, including Mr. Khan's assertion - doubted by several specialists
in the American intelligence community - that the North Koreans once
showed him what they said were three fully assembled nuclear weapons. 
The two Bush administration officials declined to speak on the record,
citing the delicacy of both the intelligence and the current
negotiations. They would not describe how much detail had been given
to the North Koreans. The presentation came in the first two days of
talks in Beijing, which American officials said may stretch into next
week. On Thursday, American negotiators, led by Christopher R. Hill,
moved past generalities in talks with North Korea and focused on the
specifics of their dispute over the nuclear program.
Later, Mr. Hill said he hoped the talks had advanced enough so that
the six nations taking part could soon start drafting a statement that
would advance the disarmament process. The other participants are
China, South Korea, Japan and Russia.
Mr. Hill said North Korea and the United States found some "common
understanding" in their meeting Thursday, but added that "a lot of
differences" remained. 
"I want to caution people not to think we are coming to the end of
this," Mr. Hill told reporters.
North Korea has long admitted to turning spent plutonium fuel from its
nuclear reactors into bomb fuel. That program is centered at the
Yongbyon complex.
In February, North Korea declared for the first time that it was a
nuclear weapons state. It said it had re-processed 8,000 fuel rods,
turning them into weapons fuel. Specialists inside and outside the
government say that fuel could be used to produce six or more nuclear
weapons, but there is no independent evidence to confirm that the
weapons have been produced.
There has long been a dispute about a second nuclear program, one the
United States alleges that North Korea began in the 1990's, when the
Yongbyon plant was "frozen" under a 1994 accord. That program, the
United States alleges, aims at producing enriched uranium, a process
easier to hide than producing plutonium. American officials, who first
told North Korea that they had evidence of the program in 2002, say
North Korea initially admitted to it. Since then, North Korea has
denied the program's existence.
A senior administration official told reporters Thursday evening that
any agreement must include disman-tling both programs. But
intelligence officials have said they do not know where the uranium
program is. 
"We don't want to be inspecting every tunnel where it might be
hidden," the senior official said. "They've got to give it up. That's
how the Libyans did it," he said, a reference to Libya's decision to
dismantle its program.
Mr. Hill has recently emphasized it is unlikely that this fourth round
of talks will produce a breakthrough but that participants instead are
hoping to agree to a statement of "shared principles." In Washington,
an offi-cial said the first two principles should be a commitment to
denuclearization of the Korean peninsula - which North Korea has
agreed to before - and a commitment that North Korea would not
transfer nuclear technology to any other state or outside group. 
The regularity and length of private meetings this week between the
United States and North Korea has underscored the vast difference
between these and earlier talks when only short and unannounced
private discussions took place. Much of the negotiating this week has
centered on such diplomatic wrangling as finding a shared definition
of denuclearization. "We're pretty close on that," Mr. Hill said. 
The definition has been a sticking point because North Korea has
reportedly tried to use it to challenge whether the United States has
nuclear weapons in South Korea, a charge the Americans deny. 
Earlier this year, North Korea suggested that the focus of the talks
should shift to mutual arms reduction. On Thursday, Mr. Hill took an
implicit verbal slap at these tactics. "The issue for us was to try to
keep these concepts with some basis in reality and not go too far away
with polemical ideas or rhetorical ideas," he said.
Aleksandr Alekseyev, Russia's top envoy, met privately with both the
Americans and the North Koreans on Thursday. "We got the feeling it
was a very difficult, concrete talk," he said. He said the two
countries moved beyond generalities and began discussing their
standoff in specific details.







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