North Korea says ready to return to nuclear talks

SEOUL, (Reuters) – North Korea yesterday signaled it  could return to nuclear disarmament talks it had declared dead  six months ago, but a report it was near restoring its atomic  plant underlined the secretive state would keep the stakes  high.  

Leader Kim Jong-il told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on a  rare visit to Pyongyang that he first wanted talks with the  United States. The North sees such talks as key to ending its  status as a global pariah that it argues gives it no choice but  to have a nuclear arsenal.  

“The hostile relations between the DPRK (North Korea) and  the United States should be converted into peaceful ties  through the bilateral talks without fail,” the North’s KCNA  news agency quoted Kim as saying. 

“We expressed our readiness to hold multilateral talks,  depending on the outcome of the DPRK-U.S. talks. The six-party  talks are also included in the multilateral talks.”  

In April, a month before its second nuclear test, North  Korea said the six-party talks — between the two Koreas,  China, Japan, Russia and the United States — were finished for  good. It walked away from those talks last December.  

This is the first time it has suggested it might return to  what has been the only international forum to try to make the  North give up dreams of becoming a nuclear warrior in return  for massive aid to fix an economy broken by years of  mismanagement.  

One analyst said it boiled down to impoverished North Korea  hoping to persuade Washington to end its economic squeeze and  the United States wanting to be certain that Pyongyang will not  sell any nuclear weaponry abroad.  

“North Korea wants sanctions removed … What the United  States wants is some assurance about proliferation because the  U.S. doesn’t really care about restoration of an obsolete  nuclear plant or how much nuclear material the North has got,”  said Cho Min of the Korea Institute of National Unification.  

He said the focus was now on whether Washington sends an  official, possibly special envoy Stephen Bosworth, to the  North.  

A State Department spokesman said yesterday U.S. diplomats  were seeking a meeting with Chinese officials to obtain more  details about the discussions in Pyongyang and what they mean  for six-party talks.  

Spokesman Ian Kelly said Washington was open to a bilateral  dialogue as long as it led to a resumption of six-party talks.  

“If we’re on a path leading to our goal, of course, that’s  … encouraging,” he said. “But … I’m not going to  characterize it until we talk to our Chinese partners.”  

The North’s chief source of material to build a bomb has  been its Yongbyon facilities which it had agreed to dismantle  during six-party talks but later said it would restore,  accusing the United States of planning to attack it.  

“We have obtained indications that point to restoration  work being in the final stages,” an unnamed South Korean  government source was quoted by Yonhap news agency as saying.  

North Korea says it is U.S. hostility, and the 28,000 U.S.  troops stationed in South Korea, that is the problem.