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Published 18 Oct, 2008 12:00am

North Korea revives disabling nuclear plan, says US

WASHINGTON, Oct 17: The United States said on Friday that North Korea has broadly resumed disabling its weapons-grade nuclear program, all within days of a deal that revived the troubled negotiations.

North Korea has removed more fuel rods from the nuclear reactor, put all seals back on equipment at the Yongbyon complex and restored the monitoring system there, according to US experts cited by the State Department.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters that the US was satisfied “thus far” with North Korea’s actions toward fulfilling its pledges.

A weeks-long deadlock was broken on October 11 when Washington struck North Korea from a terror blacklist after saying Pyongyang agreed to steps to verify its nuclear disarmament and pledged to resume disabling its atomic plants.

Just months before USPresident George Bush leaves office on Jan 20, the deal saved the disarmament negotiations — involving the United States, the two Koreas, China, Japan and Russia — from potential collapse.

“All the seals are back on, the surveillance equipment is back reinstalled, and the equipment that had been removed is back where it had been,” McCormack told reporters during the daily press briefing.

“In addition to that, they have removed more rods from the reactor. So on the reactor they have actually gone beyond where they were prior to their reversing their disablement steps,” he said.

He added that “60 per cent of the reactor rods have been removed,” but said he did not know when the process should be completed.

“Now on the reprocessing and fuel fabrication facilities, they have not yet gotten to that baseline where they were before. There is still work to be done, but (there is) progress on it,” he added.

McCormack said the next step will be for a meeting of Christopher Hill, the assistant secretary of state for East Asia and Pacific Affairs, and his counterparts from the other countries to discuss the verification steps.

The measures have still to be formally agreed as part of a protocol. “The Chinese, as chair of the six-party process, have not yet announced the date for that (meeting), so I am not going to get out ahead of them,” McCormack said.—AFP

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