North Korea nuclear deal cheered, jeered in Asia

Written by Chang on Sunday, October 12th, 2008

cheered, jeered in Asia

By

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea welcomed while Japan derided on Sunday the U.S. decision to remove from a terrorism blacklist and salvage a faltering in the final months of the Bush administration.

The impoverished and destitute North has been longing to be delisted so it can better tap into , see the lifting of many , and use banks to send money abroad instead of relying on cash-stuffed suitcases.

The decision was made after agreed to a series of of its nuclear facilities, said Sean McCormack in Washington.

South Korea’s chief nuclear Kim Sook envoy told a briefing in Seoul: “This government welcomes these moves as an opportunity that would lead to normalization of the six-party talks and ’s eventual abandonment of its nuclear programmes.”

Last month lashed out at not being removed by backing away from a disarmament-for-aid deal it made with China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the United States, and made to rebuild its plutonium-producing nuclear plant that was being disabled under the pact’s terms.

Japan, which has a simmering feud with Pyongyang over the fate of its nationals kidnapped decades ago by North and still held in the , called the move “extremely regrettable.”

“I believe abductions amount to ,” Minister said in Washington while attending the G7 meetings on the .

As part of the deal, would resume disablement of its nuclear facilities and allow in U.N. and U.S. inspectors who had been ordered out.

Some conservatives in Washington wanted a tough that would grant inspectors wide access to any suspected nuclear-linked facility in the and felt the Bush administration gave away too much for a rare diplomatic success.

Former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton, calling the agreed on “pathetic.”

“I think it is a real shame. has won about a 95 percent victory here and achieved an enormous political objective in exchange for which the United States has got nothing,” Bolton told Reuters.

Under the deal, which still has to be formalized by the six parties dealing with , experts would have access to all declared nuclear sites and “based on mutual consent” to sites not declared by the North, said Sean McCormack.

In addition, the United Nations atomic watchdog body, the IAEA, would play an important role in verifying Pyongyang’s atomic activities and the United States could take out samples of nuclear materials to check.

While being taken off the list, McCormack made clear would still be subject to numerous sanctions as a result of its 2006 nuclear test and there was still a long way to go.

tested a nuclear device in 2006 using plutonium and it is suspected of pursuing a uranium enrichment programme, which would provide a second path to make fissile material for nuclear weapons.

(Additional reporting by Jack Kim in Seoul, and Sue Pleming, Deborah Charles and Jeremy Pelofsky in Washington; Editing by Jerry Norton)

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