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Books > Social sciences > Politics & government > International relations
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Going Critical - The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis (Paperback, New Ed)
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Going Critical - The First North Korean Nuclear Crisis (Paperback, New Ed)
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"A decade before being proclaimed part of the ""axis of evil,""
North Korea raised alarms in Washington, Seoul, and Tokyo as the
pace of its clandestine nuclear weapons program mounted. When
confronted by evidence of its deception in 1993, Pyongyang abruptly
announced its intention to become the first nation ever to withdraw
from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, defying its earlier
commitments to submit its nuclear activities to full international
inspections. U.S. intelligence had revealed evidence of a robust
plutonium production program. Unconstrained, North Korea's nuclear
factory would soon be capable of building about thirty
Nagasaki-sized nuclear weapons annually. The resulting arsenal
would directly threaten the security of the United States and its
allies, while tempting cash-starved North Korea to export its
deadly wares to America's most bitter adversaries. In Go ing
Critical, three former U.S. officials who played key roles in the
nuclear crisis trace the intense efforts that led North Korea to
freeze-and pledge ultimately to dismantle-its dangerous plutonium
production program under international inspection, while the storm
clouds of a second Korean War gathered. Drawing on international
government documents, memoranda, cables, and notes, the authors
chronicle the complex web of diplomacy--from Seoul, Tokyo, and
Beijing to Geneva, Moscow, and Vienna and back again-that led to
the negotiation of the 1994 Agreed Framework intended to resolve
this nuclear standoff. They also explore the challenge of weaving
together the military, economic, and diplomatic instruments
employed to persuade North Korea to accept significant constraints
on its nuclear activities, while deterring rather than provoking a
violent North Korean response. Some ten years after these intense
negotiations, the Agreed Framework lies abandoned. North Korea
claims to possess some nuclear weapons, while threatening to
produce even more. The story of the 1994 confrontation provides
important lessons for the United States as it grapples once again
with a nuclear crisis on a peninsula that half a century ago
claimed more than 50,000 American lives and today bristles with
arms along the last frontier of the cold war: the De-Militarized
Zone separating North and South Korea. "
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