Interview With Brit Hume of Fox News
Secretary Condoleezza Rice
Fox News
Washington, DC
October 10, 2006
QUESTION: Madame Secretary, thank you very much for doing this.
SECRETARY RICE: Pleasure to be with you.
QUESTION: On North Korea, is it now not possible to suggest that this was a false alarm, that this was not a nuclear
bomb?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, we don't have full confirmation yet of what really happened there and we probably won't for a
little while. But the important thing is that they said that they had in fact tested a nuclear weapon. It's obvious that
they're trying to make the point that they're a nuclear power. It comes of course on the heels of a missile test, just a
month -- a month and a half ago. And so we have to take it seriously. And the condemnation that they've received in the
international community is absolutely appropriate and so will be the sanctions that they're going to receive from the
Security Council.
QUESTION: North Korea is pretty isolated now. They kind of are a country under sanctions. How susceptible is North Korea
to further sanctions if the sanctions that have been imposed already haven't done the trick?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, part of the goal here is to make sure that it's really the countries that have leverage, that are
a part of the effort to pressure North Korea into coming back to the talks. The United States has some leverage, but not
nearly the leverage that China has, not nearly the leverage that South Korea has. Even with North Korea's isolation, it
has extensive relations, economic and others, with China and with South Korea. It has some with Russia and with Japan.
And so having the right set of countries devoted to bringing pressure on North Korea is extremely important.
QUESTION: Talk a little bit about what kinds of things China could go along with that would make a difference in your
view?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, the Chinese are a principal funder of the North Koreans. And just in terms of foreign assistance,
the kind of money that probably helps the regime to sustain itself, given the way the North Koreans sometimes use
foreign assistance, I wouldn't even be surprised if it's used to sustain the regime itself. And so -- the habits and the
enjoyment that the regime might have. And so the Chinese in cutting off assistance can certainly make it more difficult
on the regime.
QUESTION: Are you now convinced that the Chinese are prepared to do that?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, I think the Chinese are certainly willing to have sanctions of some kind. I think they recognize
that this was a serious step over an important line from their point of view. Their language is quite unlike anything
that China has ever used about North Korea. And yes, in fact, using language that they've used maybe only four or five
times in decades and really never about North Korea, they understand the danger of a North Korea that has missiles and
nuclear weapons and can potentially one day marry those. And so I think you will see the Chinese re-evaluate this. I
don't know how far they will go, but the North Koreans have certainly put at risk their most important assistance from
their most important partner.
QUESTION: The Japanese obviously had a lot at stake here and yet a leading Japanese official said, oh, no, we'd better
not talk about our going nuclear, which a lot of people think would be tremendously alarming to China, something they're
trying to head off. Does that -- is that in effect taking an arrow out of your quiver?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, I don't think there's anybody that really thinks changing the nuclear balance in northeast Asia by
having Japan go nuclear would improve the security situation. And look, we trust the Japanese. They're our security
partner. But there's no evidence that this is a position that has any particular purchase in the Japanese system or
certainly among the Japanese population.
QUESTION: But doesn't the possibility of it add pressure on the Chinese?
SECRETARY RICE: Look, the possibility that a North Korean nuclear weapon, that is the nuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula, could set off all kinds of effects in the region is certainly there, which is why I think you're seeing the
Chinese react with the kind of strength and the kind of commitment that they're reacting with because they don't want to
see the nuclearization of the Korean Peninsula start to set off other security problems for them in the region.
QUESTION: The argument is made and you've heard it many times, Democrats have been making it, others have been making it
that if there's nothing to be lost by engaging the north in bilateral talks that could be in addition to the six-party
talks that you don't have to capitulate to anything, you simply talk to them. What about that argument?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, one would have to ask why it is that the North Koreans are so insistent on bilateral talks.
They've had plenty of chance to talk to us. In fact, they've talked to us bilaterally within the context of the
six-party talks. They have had a dinner with Chris Hill in the context of six-party talks in China. There are plenty of
opportunities. So why are they pressing this? It's because they would like to be back in the situation that they were in
in 1994 and in the '90s where it was a bilateral issue between the United States and North Korea, so that when they
cheated on the agreement that they had signed, it was cheating on the United States. It was not cheating on China. It
was not cheating on Japan, not on South Korea. What the North Koreans have sought to avoid is to be in a situation in
which all of the interested parties with all of the leverage are all parties to the agreement. And when the North
Koreans act badly, they get the kind of reaction that they got today from their most important partners, like China and
like South Korea.
QUESTION: The suggestion has been made, and I've heard it from Tony Snow today, the Administration seems to be saying
that what the Clinton Administration did in its bilateral relationship with North Korea was worth a try. In retrospect,
though, it failed. Was it not a mistake?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, any -- I guess if it didn't work, it didn't work. And so you can go back and try to recreate was
it the right thing to do. I happen to think that trying to have a situation in which the North Koreans would freeze and
then dismantle their nuclear weapons was probably a good idea. The problem is they froze, but they retained the
possibility of unfreezing at any time. They then left the Nonproliferation Treaty. By the way, we forget that they
launched a missile test in 1998 over the Sea of Japan the whole time that this relationship was supposedly developing
with the United States. So they never behaved very well during this time of intense bilateral contact. And I think the
Clinton Administration in fact had to send a military force into the area to send a signal. So the North Koreans when
they're in a situation that they can get the United States bilaterally, one on one, they're in a stronger position to
violate an agreement and then say, well, it's the fault of the United States. In a six-party framework with all the
important players at the table, they're just not in that position.
QUESTION: What about Kim Jong-il, North Korea, what is it you think they're trying to accomplish? What do they want?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, far be it for me to try to read the mind of Kim Jong-il and the North Koreans. I can tell you what
they could have. They could have a situation, if they give up their nuclear weapons ambitions, in which there's an
opening to the international system in which they begin to have more normal relations with countries. Now to be sure,
this is also a country that engages in illicit activities like counterfeiting people's money, this is a country that
abducts Japanese and South Korean citizens. So to talk about normal relations is a bit out in the future. But they could
certainly have an opening to the international system and, Brit, that would be so good for the people of North Korea who
really are the long-suffering losers as being held hostage in this regime.
QUESTION: Do we have reason to believe that they traffic with terrorists?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, they certainly have had their activities with terrorism, I mean, having at one point actually
blown up the cabinet of the South Korean Government. I don't know, but I think it's something we have to be concerned
about. I think we have to be concerned that they would try to transfer dangerous technologies. It's why our efforts to
intercept dangerous technologies, it's why the intelligence sharing is so important and it's important what the
President said yesterday that if they were to be involved in the transfer of these dangerous technologies to a non-state
actor, they would have to pay full consequences for that.
QUESTION: Let's turn to Iraq for a moment. You were there last week, you delivered a message of a -- appeared to be a
stern warning. Similar warnings were heard from Senators Warner and Levin. What did you tell them and how was it
received?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, I told the Iraqi Government that it was -- the many members with whom I met, that it was time to
put aside their political differences, was time to get this national compact in place that Prime Minister Maliki has
talked about, that means a hydrocarbon law, that means a deal on de-Baathification, that means a deal to dismantle
militias. The Iraqi people are expecting that to happen and they're impatient about it. It's time for the Iraqis to stop
killing Iraqis, that that's something that's very hard for Americans to understand, and it's time for them to build
their security forces so that they could take responsibility for their own security.
I'll tell you I thought it was received very well because I think they know that that's the task before them.
QUESTION: Well, other than the condemnation of their own people, what did you warn would be the consequences as a
failure to do these things?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, clearly the President has been very clear that we are committed to Iraq, and we're committed to an
Iraq that is able to govern itself and able to be at peace. The Iraqis need to understand, though, that of course the
other part of that is that they have to do what they need to do to be stable and to be at peace and to be secure. We
can't do it for them. I think they do understand. I found the reception of the message to be very good.
QUESTION: Has anything happened since then that indicates that they're acting on what you said?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, it's only been a few days.
QUESTION: Right.
SECRETARY RICE: But I think you're going to start to see movement forward on their national compact which gives
everybody a clear view of where they will fit in the political bargaining. So that's very important.
QUESTION: When you say it's time, that's another way of saying, as I think Senators Warner and Levin did, that time is
short. How much time do you think they realistically have to do this or have the whole enterprise begin to be judged as
a failure?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, I am not one for timetables. But I will tell you that they themselves believe that over this next
several months to the end of the year they've got several elements of their national bargain, if you will, that they've
got to get into place.
They know that the levels of violence that Iraq is experiencing can't go on. I have to say, you know, there are whole
parts of this country that are secure and moving forward, that of course there are parts of the country like Baghdad
that are not secure. And they understand that they've got to get this political bargain in place. The security forces
have to function. They've got to have police forces in which people actually have confidence. And they don't have very
long to do it.
Their view is that by the end of the year they really need to make progress on many of these fronts.
QUESTION: Iran. How do you see that now in terms of the movement forward by the international community and whether
there's any realistic chance of getting the kind of urgency that you're now seeing on North Korea there?
SECRETARY RICE: Yes. Well, the urgency on North Korea is extraordinary. I think it's -- there's no doubt that I've
rarely, maybe never seen that kind of response from the international community.
On Iran, it has been a process of moving from Iran's insistence that it would not suspend its enrichment and
reprocessing, and by the way it had done so voluntarily so it didn't have to, to a mandatory requirement for suspension
to an effort to see if we could get through negotiations a suspension through talks to now I think a recognition that
the path that we're on is the Security Council path.
There is work going on, on a resolution. It will be I think a good resolution under Chapter 7, Article 41, which means
that it will have measures probably relating to trying to stop its nuclear program. But it's going to take sometime. I
think you cannot underestimate, though, Brit, the collateral effects on Iran of being under a Chapter 7 resolution.
Because if you're making decisions about investment in Iran, if you're making decisions about how to deal with Iran
financially, the fact that this is a state under Chapter 7 resolutions is going to have an effect on your thinking about
those --
QUESTION: For the benefit of people who may not know, what's the difference between Chapter 7 and other sanctions?
SECRETARY RICE: Well, Chapter 7 is the strongest article, the strongest chapter that you can use in the Security Council
because it says that your behavior is a threat to international peace and security. It means that the world has put you
on a black list so to speak. And being on that black list is not someplace that you want to be if you want to have the
kind of interaction with the world, the kind of investment that you need to flow, the kind of freedom to move financial
assets. That's not a list you want to be on.
QUESTION: Madame Secretary, thank you very much.
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you very much.
2006/906
Released on October 10, 2006
ENDS