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Northeast Asia Peace and Security Network DAILY REPORT For Monday, July 6, 1998, from Berkeley, California, USA |
1. Light-Water Reactor Project
The Washington Post (Thomas W. Lippman, "N. KOREA-U.S. NUCLEAR PACT
THREATENED FUNDING HOLDS UP PROMISED OIL," 07/06/98, A01) reported that
unnamed US officials said that the Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organization (KEDO) cannot buy much more oil than the 152,000 tons it has
delivered to the DPRK so far this year, because it is US$47 million in
debt from previous years. US Representative Sonny Callahan, R-Ala., who
chairs the House Appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations,
stated, "I was very disappointed when I found out about that debt, and I
strongly indicated that I do not consider this an obligation of the
United States. When I found out they had borrowed money ... they said it
was secured by pledges from other nations. So I told them, call those
pledges." Callahan said that he believes the entire premise of the
agreed framework is invalid because the DPRK is pursuing nuclear weapons
at facilities other than those frozen under the agreement.
Administration officials said there is no evidence for his claims. Some
congressional Republicans have insisted that KEDO ask for a contribution
from Taiwan, but the PRC opposes KEDO membership for Taiwan. The PRC has
also declined to join KEDO or provide money, arguing that it is already a
major aid donor to the DPRK. US State Department spokesman James P.
Rubin stated, "In order to meet our share of the heavy fuel oil cost, the
president is able to invoke certain provisions of American law that will
free up additional funds so that KEDO can fulfill our commitment, and we
are involved right now in consultations with Congress to that end."
Congress has appropriated US$35 million for KEDO in the current fiscal
year, plus US$10 million as a "challenge grant," which will be released
when other countries contribute a similar amount. Former US Secretary of
State Warren Christopher had promised Congress that the US share would
never be more than US$30 million a year. Jason Shaplen, policy adviser
to KEDO, said that there is no basis for DPRK complaints about the pace
of construction at the reactor site because preliminary work is on
schedule.
2. Captured DPRK Submarine
United Press International ("UNC REPATRIATES N.KOREAN REMAINS," Seoul,
07/03/98) and the Associated Press (Kyong-hwa Seok, "N. KOREA SUB CREW'S
BODIES RETURNED," Panmunjom, 07/03/98) reported that the UN Command (UNC)
on Friday repatriated the remains of the nine crewmen of the captured
DPRK submarine. A UNC statement said that other issues regarding the
incident would be discussed through further general-officer dialogue
between the UNC and the DPRK.
3. DPRK Food Crisis
The Associated Press ("ALL N.KOREANS ASKED TO HELP FARMERS," Seoul,
07/03/98) reported that an official report by the Korean Central News
Agency on Friday said that DPRK leader Kim Jong-il on Wednesday called on
the DPRK army and citizens to help farmers increase agricultural
production. Kim called on the people to celebrate the regime's 50th
anniversary this year with "increased production of rice, vegetable,
fruit and meat." He stated, "The whole party, the entire army and all
the people should actively assist socialist rural communities, thus
reaping a bumper harvest this year without fail." On Friday, a
federation of ROK civic and charity groups began shipping 1,000 tons of
fertilizer to the DPRK as humanitarian aid.
4. ROK-Russia Spying Row
The Associated Press ("S.KOREA DECRIES DIPLOMAT EXPULSION," Seoul,
07/05/98) reported that ROK Foreign Ministry spokesman Lee Ho-jin said in
a statement that the ROK found it "regrettable" that Russia decided to
expel Cho Sung-woo, a councilor at the ROK Embassy in Moscow, on
suspicion of spying. Lee added, "The government will announce due action
after investigating the case." One anonymous ministry official said that
the ROK government would not rule out the possibility of retaliatory
action. Other ministry officials said that Cho works for the Agency for
National Security Planning. According to a statement from Russia's
Federal Security Service, Cho was taken into custody as he met with an
alleged Russian contact on Friday. The contact, an employee of Russia's
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was also detained for investigation. The
Russian was accused of "providing confidential information to South
Korean security services that was damaging to Russia's political and
economic interests."
5. US Policy towards Taiwan
The Associated Press ("U.S. SEEKS TO CALM TAIWAN," Taipei, 07/05/98)
reported that Richard Bush, the top US liaison to Taiwan, assured
Taiwanese officials on Sunday that US President Bill Clinton's visit to
the PRC had not altered US commitments to Taiwan. Bush stated, "United
States policy toward Taiwan has not changed. In all its elements, it is
exactly the same as before Clinton's trip." Bush will meet with Taiwan
President Lee Teng-hui and other officials on Monday, and is expected to
fly to Guam on Thursday to meet with Taiwanese Premier Vincent Siew.
Taiwan Foreign Minister Jason Hu said that he told Bush that Taiwan
suffered "psychological fallout" from Clinton's statement in Shanghai
last week. He added that the US now needs to take concrete measures to
reassure Taiwan. He stated, "You can't do everything with [the PRC] in
the glare of the spotlight, and keep contacts with us totally low key.
Our people will misunderstand." Meanwhile, opposition lawmaker Parris
Chang said Sunday, "No American president before used this sort of
language, or presumed to decide Taiwan's fate for it. (Clinton's
comments) pose a considerable challenge to Taiwan's freedom and
democracy."
US State Department Spokesman James Rubin ("STATE DEPT. NOON BRIEFING,
JULY 2, 1998," Washington, USIA Transcript, 07/06/98) said that US
President Bill Clinton's recent statements on Taiwan do not indicate a
change in US policy. Rubin pointed out, "that we have a position on not
supporting Taiwan independence, not supporting one-China, one-Taiwan, not
supporting Taiwan membership in international organizations that require
a party to be a state, is something that I've said from this podium....
And it's something that, for those of you who accompanied Secretary [of
State Madeleine Albright] to China, she said in China several months ago.
So that statement of policy is not new." He added that while some people
take the statement more seriously because it came from the president, "as
a matter of the official US Government policy, that's something that I've
said from this podium, and that Secretary Albright has said in China."
6. US-Japan Relations
The Associated Press (Laura Myers, "MADELEINE ALBRIGHT REASSURES JAPAN,"
Tokyo, 07/03/98), the Washington Post (Mary Jordan, "ALBRIGHT ASSURES
JAPAN THAT ALLIANCE IS STRONG," Tokyo, 07/05/98, A12), the Los Angeles
Times (Tyler Marshall, "JAPAN GIVEN REASSURANCE ON U.S. TIES," Tokyo,
07/05/98) and the New York Times (Nicholas Kristof, "ALBRIGHT HUGS WARY
TOKYO SMARTING FROM BEIJING TRIP," Tokyo, 07/05/98, 4) reported that US
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright assured Japanese Prime Minister
Ryutaro Hashimoto on Saturday that the US relationship with Japan remains
the "cornerstone" of its Asia policy. Hashimoto said that he thought
that US President Bill Clinton's just-concluded trip to the PRC "was good
for Asia and good for Japan." US State Department deputy spokesman James
Foley stated, "The prime minister was appreciative of the president's
gesture in having secretary Albright come to Tokyo to brief him and his
government." Foley said that Albright "was able to point to the trip as
having made a contribution toward making the region safer - Japan's
neighborhood safer. And that was in Japan's interest, which, obviously,
the prime minister agreed with." US presidential spokesman Mike McCurry
said, "One of the purposes of Secretary Albright's visit is to assure the
Japanese that relations with China are not a zero sum game. If U.S.
relations with China improve, that does not mean relations with Japan are
not good." However, Atsushi Kuse, a political consultant in Tokyo,
stated, "Japan is very nervous that China will replace its role with the
United States in the 21st century. Given the fact that Clinton spent a
full nine days in China, and the nature of his visit ... it gives
Japanese leadership the clear signal that America is serious about
deepening its relationship with China."
7. Security Implications of Asian Financial Crisis
The Associated Press ("JAPAN DEFENSE OFFICIAL SAYS ECON CRISIS THREAT TO
STABILITY," Singapore, 07/06/98) reported that Japan's Vice Minister for
Defense, Masahiro Akiyama, warned Monday that the economic crisis in Asia
could adversely affect regional security. Akiyama said that high
inflation and rising unemployment could disrupt the political situation
in some countries, leading to wider destabilization across borders. He
added that the economic slowdown is already causing reductions in
military spending, which can upset the regional balance of power. He
also warned that countries badly hurt in the crisis might become
increasingly insular, hampering regional cooperation and confidence
building measures. Akiyama added that the nuclear proliferation on the
sub-continent has the potential to significantly deteriorate regional and
global security and urged a concerted international effort to encourage
dialogue between Indian and Pakistan. Akiyama also stressed what he saw
as the fundamental need for the US to stay involved in the region.
8. Asian Nuclear Free Zone
The Associated Press (Birgit Brauer, "NUCLEAR-FREE ZONE URGED FOR ASIA,"
Almaty, 07/04/98) reported that Russia, the PRC, Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan
and Tajikistan signed a joint declaration Friday calling for a nuclear-
free zone in Asia. Kazakstani President Nursultan Nazarbayev stated, "We
are particularly concerned about the recent series of underground nuclear
explosions by India and Pakistan." He said that the tests "not only
worsened the relationship between these countries, but also the situation
on the Asian continent."
9. Russian Nuclear Forces
Reuters ("YELTSIN SAYS RUSSIA NUCLEAR FORCE NOT WEAKER," Moscow,
07/03/98) reported that Russian President Boris Yeltsin said Friday that
Russia's nuclear arsenal remains vital to the country's security posture.
Yeltsin stated, "Nuclear forces are some of the most important factors
ensuring the security of our country." He added, "The fact that reports
appear here and there in the media that we have got weaker on the nuclear
front, first of all, they are seriously mistaken, and second, they do not
help the state." Yeltsin's spokesman, Sergei Yastrzhembsky, said that
during a meeting of the Russian National Security Council, "Major
decisions were made on developing strategic nuclear forces, on developing
nuclear and space technology, on financing the strategic nuclear forces,
cutting arms and developing the nuclear non-proliferation regime."
Yastrzhembsky added, "The president said that Russia's nuclear forces are
under full control, reliable and meet national security needs in their
current form." He also quoted Yeltsin as urging a prompt ratification of
the 1993 START-II treaty. On Thursday, Colonel-General Vladimir
Yakovlev, the head of Russia's Strategic Missile Forces, told Noviye
Izvestia newspaper that Russia currently had 756 strategic weapon
launchers on combat duty. Yakovlev added that Russia's ability to wage
nuclear war was unchanged from Soviet times despite economic problems.
He said that the Strategic Missile Forces controlled about 60 percent of
all Russian nuclear warheads.
10. US-Russian Summit
The Associated Press ("CLINTON TO HOLD MOSCOW SUMMIT WITH YELTSIN IN
SEPTEMBER," Washington, 07/06/98) reported that an unnamed White House
official announced Monday that US President Bill Clinton has agreed to
hold a summit meeting with Russian President Boris Yeltsin in September
in Moscow. Media reports speculated that Clinton's decision to go in
September means he is willing to wait longer for Russian ratification of
the START II nuclear reduction treaty.
11. Defection of Pakistani Nuclear Scientist
US State Department Spokesman James Rubin ("STATE DEPT. NOON BRIEFING,
JULY 2, 1998," Washington, USIA Transcript, 07/06/98) said that the US
has no information to support the claim of a Pakistani scientist seeking
asylum that Pakistan was planning a preemptive strike on Indian nuclear
facilities. He added, "we note significant discrepancies in his story as
reported in the press."
12. Indian Adherence to CTBT
The Associated Press ("INDIA MULLS NUCLEAR TREATY IN EXCHANGE FOR
CONCESSIONS," New Delhi, 07/06/98) reported that Indian newspapers said
Monday that India is negotiating with the five nuclear powers to extract
concessions on the transfer of dual use nuclear technology in return for
a commitment to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). One of
the concessions India is reportedly seeking is removal of full safeguards
for nuclear power plants built with western technological assistance.
India would like such safeguards to be facility specific so that
indigenously built nuclear plants are not open to international scrutiny.
However, Foreign Office spokesman K.C. Singh stated, "India's basic
position remains unaltered." Singh admitted, however, that India was
talking to "key interlocutors" on the nuclear issue. Indian Prime
Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee's special envoy Jaswant Singh met US deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott last month in Washington and is
scheduled to meet with him again on July 9 in Frankfurt.
13. Anti-Nuclear Protests in India
The Associated Press ("INDIAN SIKHS HOLD PROTEST MARCH AGAINST NUCLEAR
TESTS," New Delhi, 07/06/98) reported that more than 2,000 Sikh
nationalists rallied in downtown New Delhi Monday to protest India's
recent nuclear weapons tests. Protesters said that heightened tension
between India and Pakistan made them feel particularly vulnerable because
Punjab, where most Sikhs live, is on the Pakistani border. Simaranjeet
Singh Mann, leader of the Shiromani Akali Dal party, said in a speech to
the protesters, "We don't want Punjab state to be another Hiroshima."
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