SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: sandintoes who wrote (470434)10/3/2003 12:55:22 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) of 769667
 
they won't or aren't there until Bush gets desperate enough to PLANT them....
Meanwhile THE REAL NUKES ARE BEING IGNORED BY THE CHICKENHAWKS~!!!
Nuclear Waiting Game Called Risky
North Korea may be working in secret as the U.S. holds out for diplomacy, critics warn.

By Sonni Efron, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — When North Korea announced
Thursday that it had finished reprocessing its 8,000
spent plutonium fuel rods — enough to make about six
atomic bombs — official Washington all but yawned.

"This is the third time they have told us they have just
finished reprocessing the rods," Secretary of State
Colin L. Powell said dryly. "We have no evidence to
confirm that."

A North Korean official's statement Wednesday that
his government would not attend a second round of
talks with five nations trying to persuade it to dismantle
its nuclear weapons programs was likewise dismissed
by a senior State Department official as no more
credible than any of Pyongyang's claims.

The reaction highlighted the strategy the Bush administration has adopted toward
North Korea, one of patience and unflappability shaped partly by design and
partly by necessity.

In private, administration sources do not dispute that President Bush — facing a
tough reelection campaign and a military stretched paper-thin by deployments in
Iraq and elsewhere — can't afford another war this term. Unless North Korea
matches its incendiary rhetoric with heinous deeds, analysts say, the president is
unlikely to abandon his stated goal of achieving a diplomatic solution to the crisis.

The other nations involved in the talks — China, Russia, South Korea and Japan
— are even more eager to avoid a showdown that could trigger hostilities, floods
of North Korean refugees, or even a decision by Japan or South Korea to get
their own nuclear arms.

Thus all five nations have an interest in making sure the negotiations do not
collapse. A senior administration official said that Washington was willing to
continue as long as negotiations were constructive but that it wouldn't wait
indefinitely.

Conservative critics say that what the administration calls patience amounts to
stalling, and carries great risk.

North Korea knows that the U.S. is fully occupied in Iraq, and while the
communist nation considers whether to attend talks, it may be expanding and
improving its nuclear arsenal and delivery systems, they warn.

"The most popular diplomatic plan still seems to be to kick the can down the
road," complained hawkish nonproliferation expert Henry Sokolski in an article in
this week's Weekly Standard, a politically conservative journal. Sokolski argues
that the administration should work to have North Korea's breach and Iran's
alleged breach of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty taken up by the U.N.
Security Council as soon as possible, which could result in sanctions.

"Pushing these steps is sure to upset the diplomatic set, who have done their best
to avoid such unpleasantness," Sokolski said. He added, however, that
nonproliferation rules are meaningless unless they are enforced.

The danger, Sokolski and dovish arms control advocates agree, is that the
message from Iraq and North Korea to other countries, including Iran, is that the
way to escape Saddam Hussein's fate is to get a nuclear bomb quickly, before
the United States finds out about it.

The administration's approach is based on the premise that time is on the
American side. U.S. officials argue that the more North Korea advertises its
nuclear capability, the more it isolates itself and alienates its last remaining
sympathizers.

"The pro-engagement camp is not sure whether North Korea will change course
but is prepared to spend years, if necessary, trying," said a Senate source, who
spoke on condition of anonymity. "This administration believes that to move
quickly is essentially to fall into a North Korean trap and to pay a high
[diplomatic] price for something we could essentially negotiate away for a lower
price."

China has told the United States it would oppose bringing the North Korean issue
to the Security Council, and China is central to the U.S. strategy of pressuring
North Korea to disarm. The Chinese foreign minister, on a visit to Washington
last week, reiterated Beijing's opposition to economic sanctions.

But Sokolski argues that the U.S. should enforce the international nuclear
protocol, even if it means risking a Chinese veto.

"We should agree that the rules do matter, and we shouldn't be afraid to enforce
them," he said in an interview. "Sometimes you have to lose before you can win."

Others argue that taking North Korea to the U.N. — which Pyongyang has said
it would consider an act of war — "puts us that much closer to a crisis, and the
Bush administration is doing everything possible to avert a crisis," said L. Gordon
Flake, executive director of the Washington-based Mansfield Center for Pacific
Affairs. He worries that the isolated and brash Kim Jong Il, North Korea's
leader, could easily blunder into a war.

"We're just not ready for a war right now," Flake said. "We can't afford to be
precipitous. Yes, there is just cause to go ahead and call North Korea's bluff on
this, but to do so would be to go it alone.

"The further we go down this road, the more likely we are to have allies when
North Korea does miscalculate and crosses the line," Flake said.

In a reversal of previous statements, North Korea's vice foreign minister said his
country would not export its nuclear capacity to others. A senior State
Department official brushed off that promise.

"They also said they weren't going to reprocess," he said.

Other diplomats and intelligence officials dismissed North Korea's claim that it
had finished reprocessing the rods as "rhetoric" and "posturing."

However, the difficulty in obtaining conclusive intelligence about North Korea's
nuclear activities has rattled Washington.

U.S. officials have long estimated that if the North Koreans were to run their
large-scale plutonium-reprocessing facility at Yongbyon, they could produce
enough plutonium for six bombs within 12 to 18 months. But intelligence officials
have said they believe the facility, where activity was seen over the winter, is not
operating now, whether because of technical problems or political considerations.

However, North Korea could be reprocessing plutonium or enriching uranium in
secret facilities with centrifuges it is believed to have obtained from Pakistan.
Underground uranium enrichment is slower, but detecting it is difficult because the
"sniffer" technology that picks up the telltale gas emitted from plutonium
reprocessing cannot detect uranium enrichment, experts say.

U.S. officials said they do have ways of uncovering uranium enrichment, but they
declined to be specific.

"The bottom line is, we can't be confident on [detecting] anything," said Michael
Levi, a nuclear physicist at the Washington-based Brookings Institution who
tracks North Korea.

Of North Korea's claim that it has completed reprocessing all 8,000 rods without
the CIA knowing, Flake said, "Either it's a typical North Korean bluff, or it's the
most massive intelligence failure we've ever seen."

CC
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext