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RICHARDSON AND PRINCIPI VISIT USS PUEBLO IN
NORTH
KOREA -- Also, get involved in nuclear reactor deliberations
with NK government officials.

North Korean soldiers watch USS
Pueblo, which was seized by North Korean navy off the Korean coast
in Jan. 1968, near Taedonggang river in Pyongyang, in this
Thursday, June 22, 2006 file photo. On Monday, April 9, 2007,
American envoys including U.S. presidential candidate Bill
Richardson and Anthony Principi, U.S. President George W. Bush's
former veteran affairs secretary, toured U.S. warship held since
1968 in North Korea. (AP Photo / Korea Central News Agency via
Korea News Service) |
Background here...
http://vawatchdog.org/07/nf07/nfAPR07/nf040907-9.htm
We have two stories.
First story here...
http://www.boston.com/news/
world/asia/articles/2007/04/09/richa
rdson_tours_captured_us_warship/
Story below:
---------------
Richardson tours captured U.S. warship
By Foster Klug, Associated Press Writer
PYONGYANG, North Korea --New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson on Monday
toured a U.S. warship captured by North Korea in the 1960s that is now
used to inspire anti-American sentiment in the reclusive communist
regime.
The North Korea colonel who served as Richardson's guide smiled as he
told the governor the ship was an example of continued U.S. aggression
toward his country. Richardson and his traveling companion, former
Veteran Affairs Secretary Anthony Principi, were then shown bullet holes
circled in red paint and a video describing the maneuvering of
"brazen-faced U.S. imperialists."
The USS Pueblo was captured by North Korea on Jan. 23, 1968, after being
sent defenseless on an intelligence-gathering mission off the country's
coast. It was the first U.S. warship captured since 1807, and remains
the only active-duty warship in foreign hands.
Navy records show the ship was in international waters at the time of
its capture; the North insists it was inside the Korean coastal zone.
North Korea held the ship's crew of 82 for 11 months before releasing
them. The ship was then moored to the bank of the Taedong River in the
North Korean capital, Pyongyang.
Richardson, a Democratic presidential candidate who is in North Korea
this week to collect the remains of U.S. servicemen killed in the Korean
War, said the tour of the ship was "unpleasant."
"Despite the success with the remains, this is a relationship with a lot
of tension, and this shows that," Richardson told reporters after the
tour.
He called the Pueblo visit "a lot of propaganda, but we're guests here."
Principi, who was a Navy officer at the time of the Pueblo's capture,
said it was disconcerting to have something from that era still on
display.
"It's very unpleasant to hear the assertion of continued aggression
against the Democratic People's Republic of North Korea," Principi said.
Pak In Ho, the North Korean naval colonel who led the U.S. delegation on
the tour, told the Americans that North Korean leader Kim Jong Il had
personally decreed that the ship should be used for "an anti-American
education."
"This spy ship, the Pueblo, is considered a vivid, living example of
such hostile policies by the U.S. against the DPRK," Pak said through an
interpreter, using the formal name of the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea.
More than 33,000 American troops died in the Korean War from 1950-1953,
and more than 8,100 are listed as missing. After North Korea invaded
South Korea, U.S. forces intervened on behalf of the South while Chinese
forces backed the North.
Richardson's four-day trip, which has been endorsed by the Bush
administration, comes days before a crucial deadline in a recent nuclear
disarmament accord. Under the terms of the agreement, the North said it
would shut down its main nuclear reactor by April 14.
Richardson has regularly made diplomatic trips, often on his own
initiative, to a number of global hot spots. Though visits to North
Korea by senior U.S. officials are rare, this was Richardson's sixth to
the country.
---------------
Second story here...
http://www.magicvalley.com/articles/
2007/04/09/ap/international/d8od7vko0.txt
Story below:
---------------
N.Korea: Inspectors in if Funds Freed
By FOSTER KLUG
PYONGYANG, North Korea - A U.S. delegation pressed
North Korea on Monday to shut down its main nuclear reactor and allow in
U.N. inspectors even as the top American negotiator said it would be
difficult for a weekend deadline on the closure to be met.
The American delegation said North Korea's top nuclear negotiator, Kim
Kye Gwan, told them his government would allow U.N. nuclear inspectors
into the country as soon as $25 million in disputed North Korean funds
are released.
Kim, who is also vice foreign minister, met with New Mexico Gov. Bill
Richardson, a Democratic presidential candidate, and Anthony Principi,
President Bush's former veteran affairs secretary, who were visiting the
North Korean capital.
But Principi said Kim told the Americans that it would be difficult to
shut down the nuclear reactor by a Saturday deadline called for in a
Feb. 13 nuclear disarmament accord. Under that agreement, the North must
shut down and seal the Yongbyon nuclear reactor and a reprocessing
facility in exchange for an initial shipment of aid.
The International Atomic Energy Agency is slated to monitor and verify
the shutdown in what would be its first visit since late 2002, when
North Korea expelled IAEA inspectors after U.S. officials accused the
communist nation of running a secret uranium enrichment program in
violation of a 1994 disarmament deal.
"They can make a beginning, but whether they can completely shut down a
nuclear reactor in such a short time would be very difficult," Principi
said.
The North agreed to shut the reactor only after the U.S. promised to
resolve the key financial issue within 30 days _ which Washington failed
to do because the fund transfer has been mired in technical
complications.
Kim "indicated that the North Korean government would invite the ...
inspectors back the moment the funds are released to the North Korean
government," Principi told reporters.
"They believe that it's critical that the $25 million be returned to
their government," he said.
In Tokyo, U.S. nuclear envoy Christopher Hill said the deadline was
going to be difficult to meet because of the ongoing dispute over the
frozen funds.
"Clearly, we're aiming for the complete implementation of the February
agreement by day 60 ... but that timeline is becoming difficult," said
Hill, who is in Japan to discuss the next stage of the nuclear talks.
He said resolving the financial dispute in the "next day or two" will be
key in order for the North to meet the reactor shut down deadline.
"We feel this should never have held up the nuclear process, but
unfortunately it has," Hill said. "We have some ideas for how to go
forward, and we'll see if we can do that in the next couple of days."
The U.S. envoy also said Washington would push the North to fully meet
its obligations. "There's no such thing as partial implementation" of
the agreement, Hill said.
The only immediate cost the impoverished North would suffer for not
shutting down the reactor by the deadline would be an initial 50,000 ton
shipment of heavy fuel oil promised as a reward. That shipment was part
of 1 million tons of oil it would get for dismantling its nuclear
programs.
The money dispute has held up progress in implementing the landmark
agreement in which North Korea promised to take initial steps toward
dismantling its nuclear program, including closing its main nuclear
reactor, in exchange for economic aid and political concessions.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack declined to comment on what
might happen if North Korea misses the deadline, but said the United
States continued to believe that all parties to the agreement are
"working in good faith to meet it."
But, he told reporters the money issue "was more complicated than anyone
could have imagined," and suggested Washington might not object to an
extension of the deadline.
"We'll take a look at where we are on Saturday," McCormack said.
North Korea has refused to move forward because of the delayed transfer
of the money frozen by Macau authorities after the U.S. blacklisted a
bank in the Chinese-administered region in 2005 for allegedly helping
Pyongyang launder money.
The delegation, which also includes Victor Cha, Bush's top adviser on
North Korea, is on a four-day trip to Pyongyang to recover remains of
U.S. servicemen killed in the Korean War.
Richardson said his delegation pushed Kim for a show of good faith that
North Korea was ready to meet its obligations under the February deal,
asking for a meeting of the six nations involved in the nuclear
disarmament talks before the deadline.
He said he was hoping to travel to the reactor site in Yongbyon, 55
miles north of Pyongyang, but there were a lot of "political issues
involved." He did not elaborate.
In the first minutes of the meeting between the North Koreans and the
Americans, which reporters were allowed to watch before being escorted
out, Kim said the visit, the first that included both Democratic and
Republican officials since Bush took office, was of "very great
significance."
Kim and the Americans met at the Foreign Ministry building, which
overlooks Kim Il Sung square. Hundreds of children and women in brightly
colored traditional Korean dresses practiced dances that they will
perform on Sunday, when North Koreans celebrate the 95th anniversary of
the birth of Kim Il Sung, the country's founding president and the
father of current leader Kim Jong Il.
Richardson and Principi also visited the USS Pueblo, the only
active-duty U.S. warship in the hands of a foreign power. A North Korean
official called the vessel a living example of continued U.S. aggression
toward his country.
Richardson, a former ambassador to the U.N., has regularly made
diplomatic trips, often on his own initiative, to global hot spots.
Although visits to North Korea by senior U.S. officials are rare, this
was Richardson's sixth.
In a possible sign of improved ties, a North Korean general said the
remains of six U.S. servicemen would be handed over to the Americans.
Three of the sets of remains had identification tags, U.S. officials
said after meeting with the general.
Richardson called it a noble humanitarian gesture that would bring
comfort to American families.
A service of the Associated Press(AP)
---------------
Larry Scott --