President George Bush has told the Treasury Department, which has been handling financial sanctions regarding North Korea, to cooperate with the State Department regarding the six-party talks, sources in Washington said.  Nevertheless, the cooperation comes with a catch. Washington has said the Treasury Department should cooperate only when Pyongyang promises at the next round of the six-party talks to take measures to “disable” its Yongbyon nuclear reactor.  [link]

Later, the article specifies that “disable” means something irreversible that falls short of “dismantlement,” the “D” in “CVID.”  Pyongyang wants us to settle for IAEA inspections, which would assuredly be as meaningless and inconsequential as they’ve recently proven to be in Iran.  Brian Lee co-reported the story, which makes this pretty much the gold standard of Korean journalism.  So consider my skepticism about this statement a reflection solely on our own government:

Washington is keen not to repeat the mistakes of the Clinton administration, which brokered the Agreed Framework in 1994.

If you say so. 

Meanwhile, Treasury’s Daniel Glaser is meeting with the North Koreans to discuss the investigation and the PATRIOT 311 designation on Banco Delta Asia.  State and Treasury seem to have been living in  separate universes in their North Korea policies, and as bungled as that sounds, Treasury’s dry and businesslike approach to its concerns is a thing to behold.  I’d love to see that approach continue, if only as a controlled diplomatic experiment.

1 Response

  1. Not good.

    I have a gut feeling if we push hard, overtly or covertly, North Korea will cave within a couple of years.

    Some are too afraid of that, because it could do so in a fashion that turns bloody for the whole region…

    I can understand that fear, though I’d push.

    But, do not make moves in Pyongyangs favor at least…..

    The only possible reason I can see for ending the most recent sanctions, or pretty much any sanctions worth noting, is for the US to save face….

    the “I’m doing something” crap….

    Why is it so impossible for people in these positions to basically admit (at least behind closed doors) that a solution is practically impossible?

    NK will never follow through on any plan that would be (should be) minimally acceptable to the US.

    So, put sanctions and pressure on the plenty of other bad stuff NK does. And don’t lift such pressure until you know the actions they are targeted at have been rectified.

    NK is not going to give up its nukes, and it is not going to allow verified eradicating of its nuke material. Period….

    NK believes it is inherently stronger than the democracies.

    It believes all it has to do is wait them out.

    And we keep proving them correct…..