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The Washington Times Online Edition

U.S. removes NKorea from blacklist

In this undated photo released by Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service in Tokyo Saturday, Oct. 11, 2008, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, wearing glasses, stands with uniformed soldiers during his visit to a military unit in unknown location of North Korea. North Korea released pictures of Kim on Saturday for the first time in nearly two months. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service) In this undated photo released by Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service in Tokyo Saturday, Oct. 11, 2008, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, wearing glasses, stands with uniformed soldiers during his visit to a military unit in unknown location of North Korea. North Korea released pictures of Kim on Saturday for the first time in nearly two months. (AP Photo/Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service)

UPDATED:

WASHINGTON (AP) – After North Korea relented on nuclear inspection demands, the U.S. on Saturday erased from a terrorism blacklist the communist country President Bush once branded part of an “axis of evil.”

The U.S. step, assailed by some conservatives who say it is sketchy and rewards North Korea’s bad behavior, is aimed at salvaging a faltering disarmament accord before President Bush leaves office in January.

State Department officials said the inspection agreement and the decision to take North Korea off the state sponsors of terrorism list were in the interests of national security and consistent with the “action for action” principle of the negotiations.

Bush approved the action on Friday and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice followed suit Saturday.

Related story: North Korea wanted to inspect U.S. nuke sites

“Every single element of verification that we sought going in is part of this package,” her spokesman, Sean McCormack, told reporters at a rare weekend briefing. The North’s removal from the list was effective immediately.

The terrorism designation — now shared only by Cuba, Iran, Syria and Sudan — carries severe penalties. But U.S. officials said North Korea would not see any immediate benefit because it is punished under other programs and could return to the list if it does not comply with the inspections.

The U.S. previously had demanded the six-nation group negotiating with North Korea — China, Japan, North and South Korea, Russia and the U.S. — approved the agreement before the administration would drop the North from the terrorism list.

North Korea will allow atomic experts to take samples and conduct forensic tests at all of its declared nuclear facilities and undeclared sites on mutual consent, according to the accord those countries soon are to formalize. It was not immediately clear if the site of a 2006 nuclear test is a declared site.

The North will permit experts to verify that it has told the truth about transfers of nuclear technology and an alleged uranium program. Officials said North Korea has agreed to immediately resume disabling its main plutonium facility. Since August, the North had reversed that process, heightening tensions.

Officials acknowledged the difficulty in checking North Korea’s accounting of its nuclear activities.

“Verifying North Korea’s nuclear proliferation will be a serious challenge. This is the most secret and opaque regime in the entire world,” said Patricia McNerney, assistant secretary for international security and nonprofileration.

Paula DeSutter, assistant secretary for verification, compliance and implementation, said the North could block access to some undeclared sites under the “mutual consent” clause, but that the agreement was no different from any other inspection deal the U.S. has negotiated.

“The idea of mutual consent is not a show-stopper for us,” she said. “There should be no anticipation by anybody that there are not going to be bumps in the road. This is going to be a bumpy road. However, we are building a road.”

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