Wednesday
Oct212009
Secretary Clinton: Sanctions On A Nuclear North Korea Will Not Be Relaxed
Travis Martinez, University of New Mexico-Talk Radio News Service
The sanctions towards a nuclear armed North Korea will not be relaxed as the United States makes an effort to reinvigorate a non-proliferation regime, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Tuesday.
“Current sanctions will not be relaxed until Pyongyang takes verifiable irreversible steps towards complete de-nuclearization. [North Korea’s Leaders] should be under no illusion that the United States will ever have normal, sanctions free relations with a nuclear armed Korea,” said Clinton during a speech in Washington, D.C.
Clinton emphasized that the message was not aimed solely at North Korea. According to the Secretary of State, the United States needs to set the example along with Russia to reduce both countries' stockpile of nuclear weapons, the existence of which, Clinton contends, has sent the wrong message to other nations.
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which guarantees countries the right for nuclear fuel, will not be effected in the reinvigorated non-proliferation regime.
“This should enable countries, especially developing countries, to enjoy the peaceful benefits of nuclear energy, while providing incentives for them not to build enrichment or reprocessing facilities," said Clinton.
The sanctions towards a nuclear armed North Korea will not be relaxed as the United States makes an effort to reinvigorate a non-proliferation regime, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Tuesday.
“Current sanctions will not be relaxed until Pyongyang takes verifiable irreversible steps towards complete de-nuclearization. [North Korea’s Leaders] should be under no illusion that the United States will ever have normal, sanctions free relations with a nuclear armed Korea,” said Clinton during a speech in Washington, D.C.
Clinton emphasized that the message was not aimed solely at North Korea. According to the Secretary of State, the United States needs to set the example along with Russia to reduce both countries' stockpile of nuclear weapons, the existence of which, Clinton contends, has sent the wrong message to other nations.
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which guarantees countries the right for nuclear fuel, will not be effected in the reinvigorated non-proliferation regime.
“This should enable countries, especially developing countries, to enjoy the peaceful benefits of nuclear energy, while providing incentives for them not to build enrichment or reprocessing facilities," said Clinton.
Former Secretary Of State Concerned By Key Element Of Obama’s Nuclear Policy
“I question the wisdom of that position,” Baker said during an appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Baker, who served under President George Bush Sr., said his opinion stemmed from an interaction with the Iraqi Foreign Minister on the eve of the Gulf War, wherein Baker cautioned that the U.S. could use nuclear arms if the Iraqis attacked American forces with biological or chemical weapons.
“It is entirely possible, and even likely in my opinion, that Iraq did not use its chemical weapons against our forces because of that warning,” Baker said. “Years later when Saddam Hussein was captured, debriefed and asked why he did not use his chemical weapons, he recalled the substance of my statement.”
The restraint on nuclear force was included in the administration’s Nuclear Posture Review unveiled in April. Iran and North Korea, who have not signed the nonproliferation treaty, are still considered legitimate targets for a nuclear attack.
The former Secretary also posed questions over a number of provisions in the New START Treaty, including whether the program in place to verify compliance was satisfactory and if the treaty will provide a large enough nuclear capacity to protect allies. Baker also argued that the treaty should just focus on the reduction of arms and not seek to limit missile defense.
These concerns aside, Baker characterized the new treaty to limit both countries to 1,500 warheads as “a modest, and appropriate” continuation of the original START treaty that expired last year.