The United States expects the next meeting of the six-party talks over
nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsular could formalize an agreement over
verification of nuclear disarmament, said US State Department yesterday.
"And we hope and would expect that the verification protocol would be
formalized in the six-party sense at the next heads of delegations meeting,"
spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters.
"What we hope is going to happen at this next six-party heads of delegation
meeting is that this is agreed upon and put in a form that all the members in
the six parties can validate," McCormack added.
The next meeting of the six-party talks will be held on Dec. 8 in China,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced Sunday, as she and President
George W. Bush flew back from Peru's Lima, where the president took part in the
16th Economic Leaders' Meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC).
The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) agreed in 2007in talks with
the United States, China, South Korea, Japan and Russia to disable its Yongbyon
nuclear facilities in exchange for economic aid and political concessions,
including its removal from the US terrorism list.
After US nuclear envoy Christopher Hill paid a three-day visit to Pyongyang
in early October and struck a verification deal with the DPRK to save the
stalled six-party talks, the Bush administration dropped the country from the
terrorism blacklist on Oct. 11.
But the two countries have disputed over the verification issue, when the US
side claims inspectors, according to the deal reached with the DPRK, could take
samples away from the nuclear facilities. The DPRK, however, insists that it
never agreed to remove the samples.
The DPRK Foreign Ministry said in a statement that the main points of the
verification deal includes confined verification in the Yongbyon nuclear
facilities, the methods of verification include field visits, confirmation of
documents, and interviews with technicians.
The verification process would only be initiated after the economic
compensation -- 1 million tons of fuel oil or equivalent -- had been delivered,
the statement said.