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NORTH KOREA
How to Confront Kim?
For the Bush administration, the worsening nuclear crisis in North Korea is turning into an exercise in frustration. For years, conservatives inside the administration have longed to face down the Stalinist state. But now that they have a cast-iron case--satellite pictures show the North is moving its stockpile of nuclear fuel rods--they can only shrug their shoulders.
When North Korea took its first aggressive steps--by kicking out U.N. nuclear inspectors in December--the Bush administration decided to play it cool. They ruled out military strikes against the nuclear complex at Yongbyon, and instead of rushing to the United Nations for action, allowed the inspectors themselves to take the lead.
Now that go-slow approach is going even slower than the Bush administration wants. After a month of diplomacy, the United States has hit a brick wall. American officials tell NEWSWEEK that the Russian, Chinese and South Korean governments have effectively blocked the nuclear inspectors from taking North Korea to the U.N. Security Council, where the United States had hoped to bring the world together against North Korea.
A board meeting of the United Nations' nuclear inspection group, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), was scheduled for this week. But South Korean officials requested yet another delay to allow for more diplomacy. The reality has been American exasperation while North Korea stages ever more aggressive moves. "We can't get the Russians and the Chinese to help us get the IAEA to live up to its mandate," complained one senior administration official.









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