International > U.S.: N.Korea Ready to Restart Nuke TalksU.S.: North Korea Appears Ready to Restart Disarmament Talks, but Wants Nuclear Reactor

U.S. Congressman Tom Lantos speaks during a press conference after his return from North Korea, at the US Embassy in Beijing, China Saturday Sept. 3, 2005. U.S. lawmakers Tom Lantos and James Leach said for North Korea appeared to be receptive to return t | Two U.S. lawmakers who visited North Korea said Saturday that Pyongyang appears ready to return to disarmament talks as promised the week of Sept. 12, but still wants a nuclear reactor a key sticking point.
North Korean officials did not name a date, "but there was strong confidence that this would go forth on a timely basis, as has been indicated," said U.S. Rep. James Leach, R-Iowa, chairman of the House Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific. He traveled to the North this week with U.S. Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif.
North Korea said earlier it would return to six-nation talks the week of Sept. 12 following a postponement that it blamed on U.S.-South Korean military exercises and Washington's appointment of a human rights envoy to monitor the North. The talks also include South Korea, host China, Japan and Russia.
Leach said North Korean officials affirmed their desire for a light-water nuclear reactor as part of a peaceful nuclear program, an issue that deadlocked the last session of talks in August.
The North says it should be allowed to operate a peaceful nuclear program for power generation. But Washington has expressed skepticism that the North can be trusted with nuclear technology.
"Clearly the North Korean desire is for a light-water reactor, and the North Korean desire is to retain a peaceful nuclear program," Leach said at a news conference.
Leach and Lantos, the senior Democrat on the House International Relations Committee, said they had about 25 hours of meetings with North Korean officials during their five-day visit.
They met with Kim Gye Gwan, the chief North Korean nuclear envoy; Foreign Minister Paek Nam Sun and other government and military officials, according to a statement released by their delegation.
2005-09-03
More news from this category:Castro Looks Healthier in TV InterviewFood Warning Issued for ZimbabweProtesters Gather For G8. Tensions Between U.S. and RussiaSpain to Seize $500M Treasure ShipsAmnesty Keeps an Eye on Darfur with Satellite ImagesCanada Denies Visa to Winnie MandelaWar Anniversary Revives Bitter Palestinian MemoriesPope Unhurt After Man Tries to Jump on PopemobileNewspaper Ad Salutes Tiananmen MothersMassive Cyclone Could Disrupt Oil Region |