The delegations of the United States and North Korea to the
six-party talks held two rounds of bilateral consultations Friday,
producing no exciting results.
The deadlocked talks itself also showed no sign of ending.
"The fourth round of six-party talks had a good start. However,
little progress has been made", said Liu Jiangyong, a professor of
the Institute of International Studies under China's prestigious
Qinghua University.
The delegations of the six-party talks on the Korean Peninsula
nuclear issue agreed Friday afternoon to continue their meetings on
Saturday as the parties concerned will continue to work for
narrowing differences.
The talks set no deadline for its duration since they started on
Tuesday at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse in Beijing. The talks
involve China, North Korea, the United States, South Korea, Russia
and Japan.
Now it is a critical moment for talks to score some "exciting
results", Liu added.
After the three-hour third meeting Thursday morning, which was
longer than the previous two meetings, the US and North Korean
delegations agreed "to continue consultations" on Saturday.
"It reflects the efforts from the both sides to narrow their
differences", said Jin Linbo, a scholar at China's Institute of
International Studies.
Christopher Hill, head of the US delegation, said Thursday
afternoon that the US and North Korea "had a lengthy discussion and
I must say there are a number of differences."
"On the other hand, on some points we have some common
understanding on how to proceed," he said.
"If we can say that in the former two meetings the two sides had
put out their attitudes and differences, then in this meeting, they
should begin a consultation of how to solve the issue", Jin
said.
"This means that the talks have come to a substantial phase,"
Jin added.
Liu said that only the US and North Korea are decisive to the
success of the fourth round of six-party talks, stressing that if
the two sides will remain committed, some positive results are
expected to be made.
A Japanese diplomatic source disclosed Friday that all parties
concerned will begin to draft a common document on Saturday that
means the six-party talks enter a new phase.
"Even if we really have a common document at the end of this
round of talks, it does not mean breakthrough has been made", Jin
said, adding that the breakthrough on paper is easy, but
implementation remains quite difficult.
(Xinhua News Agency July 30, 2005)