Report: NKorean nuclear envoy to visit US in March amid push to restart disarmament talks

By Kwang-tae Kim, AP
Thursday, February 11, 2010

Report: NKorea’s top nuclear envoy to visit US

SEOUL, South Korea — A news report said Friday that a top North Korean nuclear envoy would visit the United States for rare talks next month, amid a push by diplomats to revive negotiations on ending Pyongyang’s nuclear program. However, officials in Washington said no such visit was planned.

Plans call for North Korea’s Kim Kye Gwan to travel to the U.S. in March, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported from Beijing, citing an unidentified source.

However, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters Friday that there were no plans for a visit by Kim, and no current U.S. discussions with North Korea about such a trip.

U.N. political chief, B. Lynn Pascoe, said after concluding a four-day trip to North Korea on Friday that he was unaware of plans for Kim to travel to the U.S.

North Korea, believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for at least half a dozen atomic bombs, walked away from disarmament-for-aid negotiations last year during a standoff over its nuclear and missile programs.

However, after tightened sanctions and financial isolation, the impoverished nation has reached out to Washington, Seoul and Beijing in recent months.

Pascoe, the highest-ranking U.N. diplomat to visit North Korea since 2004, said he met with North Korea’s president and foreign minister and “argued strongly that the six-party talks should be resumed without preconditions or further delay.”

However, the North Korean side did not seem prepared to immediately return to the international disarmament talks, he said.

“The attitude right now as I said is that certainly they were not happy with the sanctions and they were certainly not eager, not ruling out but not eager, to return to the six-party talks,” said Pascoe.

Pascoe said he was reluctant to describe the North Korean position in any more detail because the U.N. is not directly involved with the negotiations.

The disarmament talks involve the two Koreas, the U.S., Japan, Russia and host China.

A bilateral meeting between the North Korean envoy and U.S. officials would be a strong sign that the push to get the disarmament talks back on track was gaining traction. It would also confirm a warming in relations between the U.S. and North Korea, wartime rivals that do not have diplomatic relations.

Earlier, Crowley said U.S. officials haven’t ruled out future meetings with the North Koreans, but “we believe firmly that the next meeting that U.S. representatives and others should have with North Korea is through a formal six-party meeting.”

North Korea wants sanctions eased and a peace treaty with the U.S. formally ending the 1950-53 Korean War if it returns to the six-party talks. Seoul, Tokyo and Washington have all urged Pyongyang to return to the disarmament talks and show progress on denuclearization before any discussions on a peace treaty or sanctions.

Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, Alexa Olesen in Beijing and Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations contributed to this report.

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