| N. Korea demands nuke reactor from U.S.(AP)
 Updated: 2005-09-20 18:59
 
 "This is not the agreement that they signed, and we'll give them some time to 
reflect on the agreement they signed," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack 
said in New York on Monday. 
 The announcement Monday that North Korea would dismantle existing weapons and 
stop building new ones, culminating two years of bargaining, contained no 
deadlines and few details. The six parties in the talks agreed to meet again in 
November, when the difficult questions of verification and timetables would be 
on the table. 
 The North had demanded since the latest round of six-party talks began last 
week in the Chinese capital that it be given a light-water reactor — a type less 
easily diverted for weapons use — in exchange for disarming. U.S. officials 
opposed the idea, maintaining North Korea could not be trusted with any nuclear 
program. 
 The issue was sidestepped Monday, with participants saying they would discuss 
it later — "at an appropriate time." The North, however, chose to immediately 
press the issue, essentially introducing a major condition on its pledge to 
disarm. 
 Japan swiftly joined the United States in rejecting the demand. 
 
 
 
  
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