Statement of Christopher R. Hill
Assistant Secretary of State
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs
Before the
House Committee on Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on
and
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade
October 25, 2007
The Six Party Process:
Progress and Perils in North Korea’s Denuclearization
Introduction
Thank you, Chairman Faleomavaega and Chairman Sherman, Ranking
Member Manzullo and Ranking Member Royce, and distinguished Members for
inviting me to discuss with your subcommittees recent developments in our
efforts to achieve the verifiable denuclearization of the
I am pleased to report several positive and significant
steps toward achieving our goal. Most
recently, on October 3, 2007, the Six Parties announced an agreement on
“Second-Phase Actions for Implementation of the Joint Statement” which outlines
a roadmap for a declaration of all of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea’s
(DPRK) nuclear programs and disablement of its three core nuclear facilities at
Yongbyon by the end of the year. These
Second-Phase actions would effectively block the DPRK’s known ability to
produce plutonium – a major step towards the goal of achieving the verifiable
denuclearization of the
Implementation of February 13 “Initial Actions” Agreement
The October 3 agreement builds on the February 13, 2007, agreement on “Initial Actions for the Implementation of the Joint Statement.” Pursuant to the February 13 agreement, the DPRK in July shut down and sealed the core nuclear facilities at Yongbyon and invited back the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to conduct monitoring and verification activities, as provided for in the February 13 agreement. Upon returning to the DPRK in July, the IAEA verified the shutdown status of the 5-MW(e) reactor, fuel fabrication facility, reprocessing facility, an uncompleted 50-MW(e) reactor, and an uncompleted 200-MW(e) reactor. The IAEA continues to monitor and verify the shutdown status of those sites.
The IAEA has reported excellent cooperation from DPRK
authorities, and we have urged the DPRK to continue to provide full cooperation
to the Agency’s personnel working at Yongbyon.
To support the work of IAEA monitoring and verification activities in the
DPRK, the
Under the February 13 agreement, the Six Parties agreed that as the DPRK implements its commitments to denuclearization, the other parties would provide the DPRK with energy assistance in the form of Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO) or its equivalent in alternative economic, energy, and humanitarian assistance. Thus, as agreed, once the DPRK implemented its Initial-Phase commitments to shut down and seal Yongbyon facilities and invite back the IAEA, it received 50,000 tons of HFO. As the DPRK has taken steps to implement its Second-Phase commitments to provide a complete and correct declaration of all its nuclear programs and to disable facilities at Yongbyon, the other parties have begun implementing their commitment to provide an additional 950,000 tons of HFO or equivalent. Additionally, as part of beginning the movement toward normalization of relations between the United States and the DPRK, the United States committed to begin the process of removing the designation of the DPRK as a state sponsor of terrorism and advance the process of terminating the application of the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWEA) with respect to the DPRK. To help implement these tasks, the February agreement established five working groups, all of which have met at least twice and reported their results to the Heads of Delegation.
October 3 Agreement on Second-Phase Actions
Building on the successful implementation of these Initial-Phase actions, the Six Parties announced on October 3 an agreement on a set of Second-Phase actions. Under this latest agreement, the DPRK agreed to provide a complete and correct declaration of all its nuclear programs by the end of the year. The declaration will include all nuclear facilities, materials, and programs. As the President said last week, it must include “plutonium that has been manufactured and/or the construction of bombs.” The DPRK also agreed to address concerns related to any uranium enrichment programs and activities.
The DPRK also agreed to disable all existing nuclear
facilities subject to the September 2005 Joint Statement and February 13
Agreement. As a start, the core nuclear
facilities at Yongbyon – 5-MW(e) nuclear reactor, reprocessing plant, and fuel
rod fabrication facility – are to be disabled by the end of the year. Specific disablement actions will be based on
the findings of the U.S.-China-Russia experts who visited the DPRK in September
to survey the facilities at Yongbyon and the
The task of disablement will not end with the core facilities at Yongbyon, and it will not end on December 31, 2007. The Parties have agreed that disablement will extend to all existing nuclear facilities and that this process will extend beyond December 31, 2007. But by the end of the year, implementation of the October 3 agreement will have effectively blocked the DPRK’s known ability to produce plutonium, and it would take the DPRK a significant period of time to restart those activities.
And as the President has said, he is pleased with the progress we're making but believes that there is work to be done. This is not the end point of the process, and we hope to move forward early next year to the Third and final Phase, which will be aimed at dismantling all of North Korea’s nuclear facilities, capturing all fissile material the DPRK has produced, and the abandonment of its nuclear weapons and existing nuclear programs.
The
Under the October 3 agreement, the
We remain very concerned about nuclear proliferation – the
potential for such proliferation has always been one of our major concerns
about the DPRK’s pursuit of nuclear weapons programs. In the October 3 agreement the DPRK reaffirmed
its commitment “not to transfer nuclear materials,
technology, or know-how,” and we intend to hold
The
Transforming North Korea’s Relations with the International Community
As the October 3 agreement is implemented and we move
forward into the next phase of actions in early 2008 toward complete
denuclearization, I believe the Six Parties can begin to make real progress on
transforming
We also remain committed to replacing the 1953 Armistice with
a permanent peace arrangement on the
We also hope to move forward on developing a Northeast Asia
Peace and Security Mechanism, which would help transform the cooperative
relationships built through the Six-Party process into an enduring security
framework for
The Road Ahead
What I have outlined here today – the agreements implemented to date and commitments still to be fulfilled – represent an important set of achievements on the road to verifiable denuclearization of the DPRK through full implementation of the September 2005 Joint Statement. But much remains to be done. Full implementation of the October 3 agreement, including follow-on disablement activities, should effectively block the DPRK’s known ability to produce plutonium, but we must continue to move forward in the Six-Party process to realize the DPRK’s abandonment of all fissile material and nuclear weapons in accordance with the September 2005 Joint Statement, as well as its return to the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and to IAEA safeguards. We will continue to work closely with our Six-Party partners as we move forward on the tough tasks that lie ahead.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today. I am happy to answer your questions.