CBS/AP/ February 29, 2012, 9:31 AM

N. Korea agrees to suspend nuclear activities

(CBS/AP) WASHINGTON - North Korea has agreed to suspend uranium enrichment and a moratorium on nuclear and long-range missile tests in a breakthrough in negotiations with the United States.

The joint announcement Wednesday by the two nations comes little more than two months after the death of longtime ruler Kim Jong Il, and suggests North Korea has met the key U.S. preconditions for restarting multi-nation disarmament-for-aid talks that the North withdrew from in 2009.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called North Korea suspension of nuclear activities a "modest first step" but also "a reminder that the world is transforming around us."

She told a Senate hearing that the North has agreed to a moratorium on nuclear activities at Yongbyon, including uranium enrichment activities, and will allow International Atomic Energy inspectors to verify and monitor it, and to confirm disablement of its nuclear reactor and associate facilities.

Since 2006 North Korea has tested missiles, staged two nuclear tests and unveiled a uranium enrichment program that could give it a second route to manufacture nuclear weapons, in addition to its existing plutonium-based program. At low levels, uranium can be used in power reactors, but at higher levels it can be used in nuclear bombs.

Clinton said the United States will meet with North Korea to finalize details for a proposed package of 240,000 metric tons of food aid, referring to it as "nutritional assistance." She said intensive monitoring of the aid would be required.

North Korea, which appealed for the aid a year ago to alleviate chronic food shortages, issued a similar, although differently worded statement released simultaneously in Pyongyang.

An unidentified spokesman from North Korea's Foreign Ministry said in its statement carried by the state-run news agency that the North agreed to the nuclear moratoriums and the allowance of U.N. inspectors "with a view to maintaining positive atmosphere" for the U.S.-North Korea talks.

"This is not the first time that the North has agreed to suspend their nuclear program and allow inspectors in," said CBS News foreign affairs analyst Pamela Falk, "but now economic sanctions are hurting and it may be that a young Kim Jong Un wants to move the country out of isolation."

"North Korea's nuclear program would have been the focus of an international nuclear security summit in late March, which President Obama will attend, and it appears that Kim Jong Un's government wants to shape the agenda, so that tougher sanctions are not imposed," Falk added.

The U.S. still has nearly 30,000 troops based in South Korea, a legacy of the 1950-53 Korean War, that ended in a armistice rather than a peace treaty.

Wednesday's announcement follows talks in Beijing last week between U.S. and North Korean negotiators, the first since negotiations were suspended after Kim's death in December from a heart attack.

Before his death, the U.S. and North Korea were close to such an agreement, which appears to meets U.S. preconditions for restarting the six-nation talks suspended three years ago. The talks also include China, Japan, Russia and South Korea.

"The United States still has profound concerns but on the occasion of Kim Jong Il's death I said it is our hope that the new leadership will choose to guide their nation on to path of peace by living up it to its obligations," Clinton said.

Clinton said the United States will judge the new regime led by Kim's youngest son, Kim Jong Un, by its actions.

The U.S. said it had no hostile intent toward North Korea and was prepared to increase people-to-people exchanges, including in the areas of culture, education, and sports.

North Korea's willingness to agree to the moratoriums and allow in U.N. inspectors is a major sign of the country's intentions in the early days of the rule Kim Jong Un, who is believed to be in his late 20s.

Kim Jong Un's consolidation of power, with the help of a group of senior advisers who worked with his father and grandfather, appears to be going smoothly. But outsiders have been closely watching to see how Kim handles nuclear diplomacy with the United States and delicate relations with rival South Korea.

Despite Wednesday's progress, many observers are skeptical whether North Korea will ever give up its nuclear program. Since Kim Jong Il's Dec. 17 death, North Korea has vowed to maintain the late leader's policies and has linked its nuclear program to Kim's legacy.

"North Korea uses (the nuclear program) as leverage to win concessions in return for disarmament measures. Since Kim Jong Il's death, it has called (the program) the country's most important achievement," Baek Seung-joo, an analyst at the state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in South Korea, said. "There is still a long way to go."

There were some differences in the U.S. and North Korean statements on the nuclear moratoriums.

The U.S. said North Korea has agreed to a moratorium on "nuclear activities" at Yongbyon, including uranium enrichment, while the North Korean statement only refers to uranium enrichment. It was not immediately clear if that implied the plutonium-based program would remain.

The North said that the United States made clear that its sanctions against the North "are not targeting the civilian sector, including the livelihood of people" and that once six-nation nuclear talks are resumed, "priority will be given to the discussion of issues concerning the lifting of sanctions on the (North) and provision of light water reactors."

Although the North has conducted two nuclear tests and has developed a battery of ballistic missiles, it says it is constructing its own light water reactor to generate electricity to alleviate chronic power shortages.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
71 Comments Add a Comment
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smittyc says:
This headline is the joke of the day. N. Korea has agreed 15x to give up nuclear. They then allowed the IAEC to inspect their nuclear sites while continuing at sites not visible. N Korea is currently nuclear capable and nuclear ready.
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commenter777 says:
NK is once again BSing us. The US is way too gullible. We were gullible with pakistan too. We seem to just easily believe what other countries leaders tell us. NK is not going to do anything different than what they have been doing. But at least this is going to make somebody in the US feel like they are doing something and maybe get them a pat on the back. NK is getting something for nothing from the US and I think that we all really know that truthfully.
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Fox_Rush_Parrot replies:
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It's not the US being gullible. It's the libs!
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rwsmith29456 says:
The whole reason for developing the bomb was so that they could appear to be the nice guys and give the nuclear program up. They will be asking for something very soon.
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Fox_Rush_Parrot replies:
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@Vet46, Nobama had nothing to do with this! He can't take credit just because he happened to be in office at the time!!!
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LunaAzule says:
Either anti-Obama statements are made by incredibly forgetfull commentors (remember which President invaded the wrong country) or are one of the many GOP rear-kissers hoping to be liked by the rich.
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Fox_Rush_Parrot replies:
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@truthisaB, Right on! I agree 100%
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ckp016c says:
Meanwhile some in our country go hungry.
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micmac666 replies:
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Yes. The amount of food that is wasted by the well-fed is unconscionable.
Fox_Rush_Parrot replies:
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@micmac666, What? The well fed?
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cbsnews_viewer says:
So, as Shakesphere said, "this is much ado about nothing". So, all us US peasants can clap in unison, like all the slave-state subjects of North Korea. Cause our "Dear Leaders" tell us they are doing the right thing. They are actually giving away food and trying to take political credit for a situation they can't do a damn thing about.
A moratorium is a delay or suspension of an activity or a law. This is just a fancy word, The North Koreans will take food, and still continue building its military (after it gets the food) like any other nation state always does.
"The US made the offer last week during talks in Beijing.", says the report.
US Politician fancy talk but they are being played. North Korea wants food while keeping their form of government, South Korea doesn't want to absorb the North and lose their standard of living by a sudden collapse. The Chinese Communist Party wants to keep building up their economy, and keep the North as a buffer against western expansionism. Russia wants to keep its government in power and continue its business dealings with other governments who might be in the target hairs of the pentagon. Ever ask yourself why, Qatar's democrat protesters got shot down and its not in the news like Syria? Answer: Qatar is a US naval base and US arms buyer, Syria is a Russian naval base and Russian arms buyer.
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micmac666 says:
We can only hope that the North Koreans are sincere, in spite of their record. It will be all but impossible to secure the technology, since the nuclear cat was let out of the bag long ago.
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technocoffee says:
240,000 metric tons of food...we can see where the food goes-to feed the multiple-chinned Kim Jong (Big) Un.....
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erasmus111 says:
by Brokennews February 29, 2012 11:08 AM EST
"Ya know E-girl. you have always seemed to be a very optimistic, tolerant & forgiving person here on the blogs."


I...I....I AM???

Well, I'm glad you think so! : )
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micmac666 replies:
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Get a room.
erasmus111 replies:
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micmac666

Get a room for what? Idiot!
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starving1968-3 says:
by LtSmily February 29, 2012 5:02 PM EST
Obama cannot win running on his record, period.







What's wrong with Obama's record?

He ended Iraq and got our troops out of there, and is currently ending the conservatives practice of forking BILLIONS OF DOLLARS to "private contractors". The gravy train is coming to a halt, and we're going to save BILLIONS of dollars because of it.

EVERY SINGLE economic indicator is improving, in spite of the lies from the GOP that they are NOT improving. He not only halted the economic catastrophe that the conservatives caused / allowed, but he's reversed it!

I'll take his progress so far, and my only lament is that the republicans ARE NOT helping him fix this nation's problems, so the recovery is taking 10 times longer than it SHOULD / COULD have.
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joelschl replies:
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More kool-aid please... we ran out because of this last poster!
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