Walkthrough With Reporters at Six-Party Talks
Morning Walkthrough With Reporters at Six-Party Talks
Christopher R. Hill, Assistant Secretary for East
Asian and Pacific Affairs
St. Regis Hotel
Beijing,
China
July 20, 2007
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: I'm
already late for these meetings so I really have
to go,
but I'll take one or two questions.
QUESTION: Is this going to be your really last day for the session?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: Yes. I think we've done
some comments for their joint
statement. We'll return the
comments to them, and presumably we will have a
little
discussion about the joint statement.
QUESTION: Do you
think DPRK has been supportive? Do you have any discussion
of
points for the deadline or statement? And would you
care to --
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: There is a
discussion about that, and now ultimately
we decided not
to put in deadlines yet. We'll put in deadlines when we have
the
working groups and we know precisely what we are
talking about. For example,
how long does it take to
disable nuclear facilities. That is a technical
question. If we put a deadline in now, we are not really
sure. My opinion
remains the same -- that all of this is
quite doable by the end of the year.
And I don't want to
quote other people about that, because it's my opinion.
But
I do believe that it can be accomplished. It is the
decision of the Chinese
chair not to include that opinion
or that guess in the statement.
QUESTION: Secretary Hill, did this session help build momentum going forward?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: Oh, absolutely. This
session absolutely has built
momentum. I mean, look at
how far we have come in just seven days. We have got
the
shutdown of the entire facility, IAEA has deployed, we've
got a means to
deliver this heavy fuel oil. But most of
all we have an incentive for everybody
to continue to
move forward, and that I think is very key. There's no
incentive
in that February agreement for anyone to say,
"Oh, I'll take a break now, and I
won't go forward."
Everyone is incentivized to move forward. So by the
standards of these things, I'm very pleased.
How are the Red Sox doing today? Did you see the scores? [Laughter]
QUESTION: The next meeting with North Korea,
can you talk about what you will
do?
ASSISTANT
SECRETARY HILL: I think we have a tentative date for before
the end
of August. So I am going to look at my calendar
and see if we can fix a date,
probably at the very end of
August.
QUESTION: So this is doable by the end of the
year. What's the incentive for
North Korea to do this by
the end of the year? This is going to take a long
time to
--
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: Well, because I think they
have interest in things
beside fuel oil. They have an
interest in getting storage capacity, things like
that.
And the time to get going on that is very soon. So the point
is, the fuel
oil, the 950 [950,000 tons], is contingent
on moving. Further fuel oil is
contingent on further
denuclearization. Everyone knows that. At this point, we
don't need to put deadlines to it. I think everyone
understands, and so we'll
try to just keep going
forward.
QUESTION: Increasing storage capacity for example
is also going to take time,
so I don't --
ASSISTANT
SECRETARY HILL: Well then we have to work out the
sequencing. Again,
how you improve storage capacity is a
very technical question which goes beyond
my modest
diplomatic background to answer for you.
AIDE: I'm sorry. We have to get going.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: I've
really got to go, because the Chinese foreign
minister
is expecting to see us all at 10:00, and I don't think it
would be
very polite if we walked in at ten past.
See you later. See you next time. There will be a next time. [Laughter]
QUESTION: Will you be back here today?
ASSISTANT SECRETARY HILL: I doubt I'll be coming back, I
have a pretty busy
schedule and I have checked out and
turned in my room key. Thank you, see you
later.
ENDS