Telling Half the Story at Yongbyon

The Washington Post reassures us that North Korea’s threat to restart plutonium processing is mostly empty because of the current condition of its 5-MW reaction. Not only do I agree that the reactor is probably a wreck, I believe that was also true before the North Koreans sold us their scrap heap for such a high price. Funny, I don’t remember Siegfried Hecker telling us that in 2007 when the State Department was telling us what a breakthrough this deal was.

The major premise of Post’s story relies mostly on Hecker, who strongly supports any deal the North Koreans give us, and on a few like-minded others. It also focuses exclusively on one reactor in North Korea’s plutonium reprocessing program. The Post would have written a more balanced and informative story if it had started with its own archives and questioned Hecker — and some contrarian experts like Caroline Leddy or Henry Sokolski — about the 50-MW reactor nearby. I could be convinced that the 50-MW reactor isn’t really the danger the Post suggested it was in 2005, but I have yet to see any serious recent reporting on that big pink elephant in this room.

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  1. Hello, if we don’t have to worry because of the suspected poor condition of the reactor, then we don’t have to bribe them not to restart the reactor. Let them waste their own money trying to get it restarted instead of the US providing the ‘seed money’ to do this.

    I bet the North Koreans are real eager to get their list of demands to the Obama Administration in expectation of a handsome payoff, which is all the reason more to stay as far away from the negotiating table as possible.

    One lesson to keep in mind:
    “No-one ever stopped the bullies from taking your lunch money by being nice”

    One more on negotiating with the North:
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3928777845725985656&ei=UmbwSc_xJaSkqgKrn4iHBg&q=%22Be+Warned+About+the+North+Koreans%22