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China-Japan-Koreas
Light-water reactors not part of grand bargain for Norks
2009-09-28
INCHEON, Sept. 27 (Yonhap) -- South Korea ruled out the construction of light-water reactors Sunday as part of a "grand bargain" that President Lee Myung-bak had recently proposed to press North Korea to abandon its nuclear arms programs.

The United States stopped building two light-water reactors in North Korea in late 2002 after suspicions arose that the communist state was running a secret nuclear program based on uranium enrichment. The halt prompted North Korea to exit the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) the following year. The reactors -- incapable of producing weapons-grade plutonium -- would have provided a significant source of energy for the impoverished North.

Wi Sung-lac, South Korea's chief nuclear envoy, told Yonhap News Agency that the construction would not resume at least until Pyongyang dismantles its nuclear programs and returns to the NPT. "Construction of light-water reactors is an issue that can be discussed once the North is denuclearized and returns to the NPT regime," he said at an airport in Incheon, west of Seoul.

Wi was returning from a weeklong trip to the U.S. where he met with senior officials of the U.S., Japan and Russia, which are members of the six-nation talks on the North's nuclear programs. The talks -- which the North declared defunct earlier this year in protest at U.N. condemnation of its rocket launch -- also include South Korea and host China.

South Korea's President Lee on Sept. 21 urged North Korea to return to the talks, proposing a "grand bargain" in which Pyongyang would be given a set of economic and political incentives if it completely abandoned its nuclear programs.

"The reactors the North demanded in the past are not part of the grand bargain," Wi said, adding that sanctions and dialogue will be pursued simultaneously to put pressure on the North.
Posted by:Steve White

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