North Korean nuclear documents appear complete
While translation and analysis of the 18,822 Korean-language documents is still under way, officials said an early look indicates they include full details of North Korea's plutonium program dating back to 1986. The officials cautioned, however, that a full assessment is not done and experts are still poring through the files.
"It appears to be a complete set," said Sung Kim, the U.S. diplomat who traveled to North Korea to pick up the documents in seven large boxes and returned to Washington on Monday. He said a full review by an interagency team from the departments of State, Energy and intelligence organizations would take several weeks.
The documents include daily operational logs, production notes and receipts, he told reporters.
"These documents are an important first step," Kim said, but on their own are not enough to satisfy North Korea's obligation to fully account for its plutonium work, and to address allegations that it operated a separate uranium program and spread nuclear technology or material to countries such as Syria.
Washington plans to scrutinize the technical logs from the North's main nuclear reactor to determine whether the regime is telling the truth about its atomic programs. Production of the records is a key element in the international effort to get North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons.
Under an agreement last year with South Korea, the United States, China, Japan and Russia, the current phase of denuclearization obliges North Korea to declare and disable all its nuclear programs. It is to be followed by the third and final phase in which Pyongyang must give up all its fissile material.
The deal gives the North energy, economic and political incentives to give up weapons and the ability to make them.
Kim said the North has completed eight of 11 required steps to dismantle its reactor, but it appears to be deliberately slowing the pace of the remaining work. The North wants to make sure it gets fuel oil promised by other nations before it finishes the work, Kim said. At the current pace it will take several more months to disable the reactor, he said.
"We'd like to see it sped up," he said.
Earlier, a senior State Department official said the cache appeared to include "all the production records from the period. The initial assessment is that it looks pretty good, that they have pretty much given us what they said they were going to give us."
Recent comments
Do the documents show when they gave the aid to Syria?
Yeah...
russ | May 13, 2008 at 7:10 p.m.


