Is North Korea a nuclear weapon state?
2010-03-30 16:23
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"We know North Korea detonated a nuclear weapon in 2006," Panetta said in his opening statement at his Senate confirmation hearing.
The CIA director-designate`s comments are somewhat different from the position that had been held by the former Bush administration that North Korea detonated a nuclear device, not a nuclear weapon.
The Bush administration had vowed not to regard North Korea as a nuclear weapon state, refusing to confirm whether the North possesses nuclear weapons.
But Panetta`s comments are in line with recent remarks made by new Defense Secretary Robert Gates.
Gates said in his contribution article to Foreign Affairs journal that North Korea has built several nuclear bombs. Some U.S. intelligence and defense reports have also categorized the North as a nuclear weapon state.
Diplomatic observers in Seoul said the CIA director-nominee`s remarks indicate that the Obama administration is accepting North Korea`s possession of nuclear weapons as a fait accompli although it would not officially recognize the communist country`s nuclear-state status.
"But we don`t know whether Kim Jong-il is prepared to give up that nuclear capability once and for all," Panetta said.
Six countries - South and North Korea, the United States, China, Japan and Russia - have long held talks aimed at ending the North`s nuclear ambitions. The latest round of the six-party talks stalled in December over North Korea`s refusal to allow inspectors to take samples from its nuclear reactor.
U.S. President Obama has vowed to continue the talks and opened the possibility of meeting North Korean leader Kim Jong-il as part of bilateral engagement to resolve concerns over North Korea nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.
New reports said North Korea is getting ready to test-launch another ballistic missile capable of reaching the western part of the mainland U.S., raising tension on the Korean Peninsula.
North Korea last test-fired a ballistic missile in 2006, but its success is disputed because of its short-lived flight time.
The CIA director-designate also pointed to North Korea as one of the security priorities facing the United States.
"I really do think that if we are going to come into the 21st century we have got to set a list of priorities that not only look at current crises - and clearly we`ve got Afghanistan, we`ve got Pakistan, we`ve got Iraq, we have North Korea," Panetta said.
He was stressing the importance of "clearly looking at Russia and China" and other "potential crises" that could develop in the future.
(shinyb@heraldm.com)
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The ruling Grand National Party yesterday zeroed in on chief justice Lee Yong-hoon as it upped the ante in a dispute over controversial court rulings.
The conservative GNP called on the Supreme Court head to take responsibility for the controversy surrounding "slanted" rulings.
The party said it will officially demand he dissolve a private association of young, progressive-minded justices who are involved in the court decisions in question.
Lee struck back, telling reporters, "I will firmly safeguard the independence of judiciary."
Lee had kept silent in the face of one of the widest-reaching and fiercest political disputes to engulf the judicial institution. Lee was appointed by former President Roh Moo-hyun in September 2005 for a six-year term.
The GNP and conservatives blamed him for "leftist tendencies" among young justices and a series of "politically biased" rulings.
Lee had kept silent in the face of one of the widest-reaching and fiercest political disputes to engulf the judicial institution. Lee was appointed by former President Roh Moo-hyun in September 2005 for a six-year term.
The GNP and conservatives blamed him for "leftist tendencies" among young justices and a series of "politically biased" rulings.
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