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Iran, North Korea Issues Dominate Opening of Nonproliferation
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Conference
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(http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=D42756:2AB91D3

United States proposing international measures against countries in
violation of nuclear non-proliferation obligations







UN meets on nuclear non-proliferation treatyConcerns about Iran and
North Korea have dominated the opening session of a month-long
conference on preventing the spread of nuclear weapons. The United
States is proposing international measures against countries in
violation of nuclear non-proliferation obligations.

Secretary-General Annan Monday warned that the 1970 nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) must be updated to meet challenges
unforeseen when it was signed 35 years ago. Mr. Annan's warning came
in an address to a conference at the United Nations to review the NPT,
considered the cornerstone of arms control.

"The plain fact is that the regime has not kept pace with the march of
technology and globalization, and developments of many kinds in recent
years have placed it under great stress," he said.

Mr. Annan acknowledged that the NPT review conference faces a number
of daunting challenges that have cast serious doubt on its chances for
success. Among them is a clash of priorities.

On one hand, countries such as the United States, want to focus on
issues such as Iran, North Korea and preventing terrorists from
acquiring nuclear weapons. On the other are those pushing the big
powers to make a stronger commitment to nuclear disarmament.

In his speech, the secretary-general did not mention any country by
name, but he issued a clear challenge to Russia and the United States
to further reduce nuclear stockpiles built up during the Cold War.

"An important step would be for former Cold War rivals to commit
themselves irreversibly to further cuts in their arsenals, so that
warheads number in the hundreds, not the thousands," he said.

U.S. delegate to the conference, Assistant Secretary of State Stephen
Rademaker was more blunt. He referred several times to Washington's
concern about suspected nuclear weapons activity in North Korea and
Iran.

He expressed support for European Union efforts to persuade Tehran to
provide assurances that it has ended its clandestine nuclear weapons
program. But he called for international action against countries that
violate their nuclear non-proliferation obligations.

"Even today, Iran persists in not cooperating fully. Iran has made
clear its determination to retain the nuclear infrastructure it
secretly built in violation of its NPT safeguards obligations, and is
continuing to develop its nuclear capabilities around the margins of
the suspension it agreed to last November," he said.

Mr. Rademaker also noted that North Korea had violated the NPT
repeatedly before withdrawing from the treaty two years ago. He
reiterated Washington's rejection of Pyongyang's call for direct
negotiations on ending its nuclear weapons program.

"We are attempting to bring together the regional players in the Six
Party Talks to convince Pyongyang that its only viable option is to
negotiate an end to its nuclear ambitions. We have tabled a proposal
that addresses the North's stated concerns and also provides for the
complete, verifiable, and irreversible elimination of North Korean
nuclear programs," he said.

The NPT is reviewed every five year at a conference where consensus
political commitments are not legally binding, but reinforce
non-proliferation initiatives. Nearly all 191 U.N. member states are
participating.

Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi is due to address the
gathering Tuesday.

Aside from North Korea, which withdrew, only three countries, India,
Pakistan and Israel, have not signed the NPT convention, and are not
attending the conference.