Dave Eberhart, NewsMax.com
Monday, Oct. 9, 2006
                           North Korea's first detonation of a nuclear weapon may have taken place during the watch of George W. Bush
                           — but it was under the Clinton administration's watch that the communist regime began gathering necessary materials
                           and constructing the bomb. 
                           
                           
                           
As Western powers race to confirm that North Korea did in fact explode a nuclear device in Gilju, a remote
                           region in the Hamgyong province, some see it as a culmination of weak U.S. action during the 1990s that led to this fateful
                           day. 
                           
                           
                           
Fateful Beginnings 
                           
After entering into an agreement with the United States in 1994, the Clinton administration ignored evidence
                           the North Koreans were violating the agreement and continuing to build a nuclear weapon. "In July of 2002, documentary evidence
                           was found in the form of purchase orders for the materials necessary to enrich uranium," NewsMax's James Hirsen previously reported. 
                           
                           
                           
                           
"In October 2002, Assistant Secretary of State James Kelly met with his North Korean counterpart for scheduled
                           talks. Kelly confronted North Korea with the tangible evidence of its duplicity. After a day of outright denial, North Korea
                           abruptly reversed its position and defiantly acknowledged a secret nuclear program." 
                           
                           
                           
Timeline of a Nuclear Bomb 
                           
A review of recent history shows that that the Clinton administration gave up a clear and perhaps last best
                           chance to nip the North Korean bomb in the bud: 
                           
                           
1985: North Korea signs the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. 
                           
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1989: The Central Intelligence Agency discovers the North Koreans are building a reprocessing facility
                           — a reactor capable of converting fuel rods into weapons-grade plutonium. The fuel rods were extracted 10 years before
                           from that nation's Yongbyon reactor. 
                           
The rods represent a shortcut to enriched plutonium and an atomic bomb.
                           Spring, 1994: A year into President Clinton's first term, North Korea prepares to remove the Yongbyon
                           fuel rods from their storage site. North Korea expels international weapons inspectors and withdraws from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
                           Treaty. 
                           
                           
                           
                           - 
                           Clinton asks the United Nations Security Council to consider sanctions. North Korean spokesmen proclaim such
                           sanctions would cause war.  
                            
- The Pentagon draws up plans to send 50,000 troops to South Korea — along with 400 war planes, 50 ships,
                           Apache helicopters, Bradley fighting vehicles, and Patriot missiles. An advance force of 250 soldiers is sent in to set up
                           headquarters for the expanded force. 
                           
                            
- Clinton balks and sets up a diplomatic back-channel to end the crisis — former President Jimmy Carter.
                           Exceeding instructions, Carter negotiates the outlines of a treaty and announces the terms live on CNN. 
                           
                            Oct. 21, 1994: The United States and North Korea sign a formal accord based on those outlines, called
                           the Agreed Framework. Under its terms: 
                            
                            
- North Korea promises to renew its commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, lock up the fuel rods,
                           and let inspectors back in to monitor the facility. 
                           
- 
                           
- 
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- The United States agrees — with financial backing from South Korea and Japan — that it will provide
                           two light-water nuclear reactors for electricity, send a large supply of fuel oil, and that it will not invade North Korea.
                           
                           
                            
- Upon delivery of the first light-water reactor, inspections of suspected North Korean nuclear sites were
                           supposed to start. After the second reactor arrived, North Korea was supposed to ship its fuel rods out of the country. 
                           
                            
- The two countries also agreed to lower trade barriers and install ambassadors in each other's capitals —
                           with the United States providing full assurances that it would never use nuclear weapons against North Korea. 
                           
                            (None of the above came to pass. Congress did not make the financial commitment — neither did South
                           Korea. The light-water reactors were never funded. The enumerated steps toward normalization were never taken.)  
                           Jan. 2002: In President Bush's State of the Union Address, he famously labels North Korea, Iran, and Iraq
                           as an "axis of evil." 
                           
                           
Oct., 2002: Officials from the U.S. State Department fly to Pyongyang, where that government admits
                           it had acquired centrifuges for processing highly enriched uranium, which could be used for building nuclear weapons. 
                           
                           
                           It is now clear to all parties that the promised reactors are never going to be built. Normalization of relations
                           fizzles. 
                           
                           
                           The CIA learns that North Korea may have been acquiring centrifuges for enriching uranium since the late
                           1990s — probably from Pakistan. 
                           
                           
Oct. 20, 2002: Bush announces that the United States is formally withdrawing from the Carter-brokered
                           1994 agreement. 
                           
                           
                           The United States. halts oil supplies to North Korea and urges other countries to cut off all economic relations
                           with Pyongyang. 
                           
                           
Dec., 2002: North Korea expels the international weapons inspectors, restarts the nuclear reactor at
                           Yongbyon, and unlocks the container holding the fuel rods. 
                           
                           
Jan. 10, 2003: North Korea withdraws from the Non-Proliferation Treaty — noting, however, that
                           there would be a change of position if the U.S. resumed its obligations under the Agreed Framework and signed a non-aggression
                           pledge. 
                           
                           
March, 2003: President Bush orders several B-1 and B-52 bombers to the U.S. Air Force base in Guam
                           — within range of North Korea. 
                           
                           
April, 2003: North Korea's deputy foreign minister announces that his country now has "deterrent" nuclear
                           weapons. 
                           
                           
May, 2003: Bush orders the Guam-based aircraft back to their home bases. 
                           
                           
October, 2003: The North Koreans announce they have reprocessed all 8,000 of their fuel rods and solved
                           the technical problems of converting the plutonium into nuclear bombs. 
                           
                           Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
                           
North Korea
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