/ 5 May 2003

‘Masters of ambuigity’ threaten to scuttle talks

North Korea threatened on Monday to scuttle all nuclear talks unless the United States responds positively to the North’s offer to dismantle it nuclear programme in exchange for economic and diplomatic payoffs.

The North’s ruling Workers Party newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, accused Washington of ignoring the North’s proposal, presented at talks in Beijing last month meant to defuse the six-month-old nuclear crisis.

”If the US does not positively respond to the DPRK’s (North Korea’s) bold proposal, it will be held accountable for scuttling all efforts for dialogue and seriously straining the situation,” it said.

At the talks last month, North Korea offered to ditch its nuclear and missile programmes in return for economic and diplomatic benefits, according to US accounts.

The United States has demanded the verified and irreversible scrapping of the Stalinist state’s nuclear programmes as a prelude to substantive talks while the North has asked for security guarantees first.

US Secretary of State Colin Powell said on Sunday that North Korea are ”masters of ambuigity,” refering to the the North’s statements that it already has a nuclear arsenal.

Powell said in an interview with US television network NBC that North Korea claims to have reprocessed all of its uranium, which would produce enough plutonium to develop five or six weapons.

”We can’t confirm that with our intelligence, but that’s what they say. What they have gotten in response to these statements is nothing from us except condemnation,” he said. ”Their nuclear weapons are not going to purchase them any political standing that will cause us to be frightened or to think that somehow we now have

to march to their tune.”

The nuclear standoff began with US envoy James Kelly’s disclosure in October that North Korea had admitted to running a secret uranium-enrichment program.

Ratcheting up tension, North Korea has since expelled UN nuclear inspectors, withdrawn from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and reactivated its mothballed plant for weapons-grade plutonium. – Sapa-AFP