U.S. to brief on alleged N.Korea-Syria nuclear link

Tue Apr 22, 2008 6:22pm EDT
 
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By Arshad Mohammed

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Bush administration plans to brief U.S. lawmakers behind closed doors on Thursday about North Korea's suspected nuclear cooperation with Syria, congressional sources said on Tuesday.

The White House has said little in public about the issue since Israel conducted a mysterious September 6 air strike inside Syria that U.S. media reports said was directed at a nuclear site that may have been built with North Korean assistance.

While a handful of lawmakers were briefed on the issue last year, the decision to widen the circle substantially comes as Washington appears closer to a deal for North Korea to provide a long overdue declaration of its nuclear programs.

Once the poor, communist state has produced the declaration, the United States is expected to ease sanctions on Pyongyang that flow from its presence on the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism and the U.S. Trading With the Enemy Act.

A senior congressional aide and a former Bush administration North Korea specialist said they believed the briefings were designed to persuade members of Congress that removing those sanctions was justified.

Congressional sources said the briefings would be for members of the House of Representatives and Senate committees that deal with armed services, foreign affairs and intelligence.

Spokesmen for the White House and for the office of the Director of National Intelligence declined comment.

"The administration routinely keeps appropriate members of Congress informed of national security and intelligence matters, but I'm going to decline to comment on any specific briefings," said National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe.

Asked why the briefings were happening now, the senior congressional aide said, "Because they are about to lift sanctions ... and they want to convince members that we have enough clarity from what the North Koreans have acknowledged to us, and what we have learned through our own methods, to proceed with confidence."

COMPROMISE WITH NORTH KOREA

"Otherwise, they are just setting themselves up for legislative obstructionism on the lifting of the sanctions," the aide added.

Michael Green, a former National Security Council official now at the CSIS think tank, said a compromise the United States and North Korea reached recently in Singapore on the declaration had run into congressional resistance.

Under that compromise, North Korea would produce a declaration of its plutonium-related program but would address suspicions on nuclear proliferation with Syria and on its suspected uranium enrichment program in a different way.

According to people familiar with the plan, Washington would put forward its concerns about North Korea's suspected uranium enrichment program and nuclear proliferation and North Korea would then "acknowledge the U.S. concerns."

"The news about the Singapore agreement is becoming public and some members on the Hill ... are realizing that the Singapore agreement does not cover proliferation with Syria or the uranium enrichment program," Green said.  Continued...

 
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