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N. Korea pact marks major shift for Bush

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Times Staff Writer

The tentative international nuclear agreement with North Korea marks a fundamental shift in direction for the Bush administration, which for years had sternly demanded that the country’s leadership abandon its nuclear program before receiving any rewards.

In his first term, President Bush rejected Clinton administration attempts to win North Korean cooperation with aid, and declared that only after “complete, verified, irreversible dismantlement” of its nuclear program could the autocratic regime in Pyongyang, the capital, receive American help.

But as the White House held fast to its hard-line approach, Kim Jong Il’s rickety government built an estimated eight to 10 bombs, experimented with missile launches, conducted a nuclear test, and seemed poised to continue the buildup with impunity.

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The agreement reached Tuesday would bring Pyongyang back to the bargaining table, with pledges to freeze its primary nuclear reactor and to discuss dismantling its entire nuclear infrastructure. It was hailed by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as a “breakthrough.”

But the deal also gives the impoverished regime an immediate 50,000 tons of fuel oil and other aid and commits the United States to the kind of direct talks with the North Koreans that the White House had long ruled out.

The deal provoked outrage from conservative allies of the administration who said it flatly contradicted Bush’s previous policy. Some former Clinton administration officials termed it a step in the right direction but questioned why it took Bush so long.

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Many observers acknowledged that the White House had few choices at this point.

“They recognized that they had to adopt a practical approach,” said Gary Samore, a National Security Council official during the Clinton administration who is at the Council on Foreign Relations. “They had to do something to stabilize the situation, or they would face a full-blown crisis on the Korean peninsula.”

Just the first step

The pending accord reached Tuesday is only a first step toward a negotiated end to North Korea’s nuclear program, U.S. officials acknowledged. It calls for the regime to shut down and seal its primary nuclear facilities, at Yongbyon, and to allow the return of United Nations nuclear inspectors to verify the process. Then the North Koreans are to begin a complex series of talks with the United States, South Korea, Japan, China and Russia.

If North Korea discloses all of its nuclear programs, and disables all facilities, it will be entitled to additional aid, including 950,000 tons of heavy fuel oil. The process also promises North Korea a chance to reach two other goals: normalized relations with the United States and removal from the American list of government sponsors of terrorism.

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Yet U.S. officials acknowledge that there are a number of issues that could derail a process that has faltered repeatedly since 1993.

“This is the first quarter, not the fourth,” Rice cautioned.

Some critics of the administration were quick to charge that the deal had gotten the White House only back to where it was at the beginning of Bush’s first term.

“This deal takes us back to the future,” said Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “The good news is that it freezes in place North Korea’s nuclear program. The bad news is that North Korea’s program is much more dangerous to us now than it was in 2002, when President Bush rejected virtually the same deal he is now embracing.”

From a conservative perspective, Bruce Klingner of Heritage Foundation said the deal “sends a dangerously accommodating signal not only to North Korea but also to Iran and any other aspiring nuclear weapons state.”

Rice, defending the deal, said the United States was entering these talks in a much better position than it had during the days of the so-called Agreed Framework negotiations initiated in 1994 by the Clinton administration. Bush abandoned those talks in November 2002, amid signs that Pyongyang was carrying on a secret uranium-based bomb program.

Rice said the difference now is that the United States has greater leverage with North Korea because of the influence of the four other countries that also will be at the negotiating table. China, North Korea’s primary energy source and chief trading partner, has brought pressure on Pyongyang since its nuclear test in October, U.S. officials say.

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Rice also asserted that the upfront aid that Pyongyang receives for coming back to the table is “modest” -- only a fraction of the 2 million tons of heavy fuel oil it was demanding.

Some experts who analyzed the deal agreed.

“Fifty thousand tons is a small amount,” said L. Gordon Flake, a longtime Korea watcher at the Mansfield Foundation in Washington. “It’s basically a face-saving gesture for the North Koreans.”

Although the deal dramatically illustrates how far the administration has come, there have been signs for some time that the United States was open to a more flexible approach.

One such sign was in early 2005, when Rice named Christopher Hill, a veteran dealmaker who helped negotiate the Bosnia peace settlement, to be assistant secretary of State for East Asia, making him the State Department’s top negotiator on North Korea.

Hill has worked with Rice and Bush as hard-liners such as former U.N. Ambassador John R. Bolton and Robert G. Joseph, the State Department’s top proliferation official, were leaving the administration.

Bolton on Tuesday branded the agreement a charade and said it “contradicts fundamental premises of the president’s policy.”

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Last month, Hill met with North Korean officials in Berlin and began talking of a new “bilateral” approach, despite the administration’s formal insistence that negotiations must be through meetings of all six countries involved in the discussions.

Another sign of a possible change was Bush’s State of the Union address in January. Unlike the speeches of previous years, in which the president berated North Korea, Bush mentioned North Korea only once, doing so to point out that his team was “pursuing intensive diplomacy” to eliminate nuclear weapons from the Korean peninsula.

Iran and Iraq play part

One factor in the change of the administration’s approach was its desire to show another country believed to have nuclear weapon ambitions, Iran, that there could be benefits to giving up a program, U.S. officials said.

Some outside analysts believe it also reflects the administration’s desire in its last two years to try to achieve progress on halting nuclear proliferation, at a time when most of its energies are being poured into the effort in Iraq.

“They’ve been feeling the need to make progress on proliferation, and they felt they hadn’t done everything they could,” said Derek Mitchell, a former Clinton administration defense official who is with the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Some analysts see the deal as the latest sign that the Bush administration has been forced to turn to compromise solutions that would have had far less appeal in its early days when it appeared that it had more choices.

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“This demonstrates something that we’ve seen overall, that in its waning days, with its options and resources limited by Iraq, more and more it is turning to these practical policy options,” said Samore, who is director of research for the Council on Foreign Relations. “You see it in the Middle East, you see it in East Asia. This is a trend that will continue.”

paul.richter@latimes.com

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