Dealing with North Korea
Tags: NUCLEAR arms control; UNITED States -- Foreign relations
Related Articles
- Wisdom needed to leave nuclear madness behind. // National Catholic Reporter;04/28/2000, Vol. 36 Issue 26, p32
Editorial. Criticizes the position of the United States government on nuclear arms control. Commendation for the Russian Duma's approval of the 1993 START II arms control agreement; Anticipation for a public debate on nuclear arms control in the United States.
- Memorandum on the certification of North Korea. Clinton, William J. // Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents;3/24/97, Vol. 33 Issue 12, p382
Presents the United States President's March 18, 1997 memorandum for the Secretary of State, on the certification of North Korea's compliance with the provisions of the Agreed Framework for the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. Full cooperation in the canning and safe storage of all...
- A nuclear North Korea. Mack, Andrew // World Policy Journal;Summer94, Vol. 11 Issue 2, p27
Discusses global security implications of the North Korean nuclear weapons program. Worsening of economic crisis; Rationale for developing atomic weaponry; Perception of military threats from South Korea and the United States; Option of economic sanctions; Risks of military intervention;...
- Well, what he meant.... Schorr, Daniel // New Leader;1/17/94, Vol. 77 Issue 1, p4
No abstract available.
- NORTH KOREA On hold...again. Sigal, Leon V. // Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists;May/Jun2001, Vol. 57 Issue 3, p32
Focuses on the deal between the United States (U.S.) and North Korea to end the nuclear arms program and missile exports of North Korea. Decision of Pyongyang to trade its nuclear arms program in return for amity with the U.S.; Details on the missile deal between the U.S. and North Korea;...
- Curbing Chinese missile sales: From imposing to negotiating China's adherence to the MTCR. Kennedy, Jr., Bingham // Journal of Northeast Asian Studies;Spring96, Vol. 15 Issue 1, p57
Assesses American efforts to elicit Chinese adherence to the guidelines and parameters of the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR). Use of economic pressures; Sources of China's resistance to the MTCR; Imposition of China's first MTCR commitment; Negotiating China's `reaffirmation.'
- Cologne: Nuclear cuts, limited missile defenses. Graham Jr., Thomas; Yereskovsky, Alexander S. // Aviation Week & Space Technology;7/12/1999, Vol. 151 Issue 2, p70
Calls for the United States and Russian governments to pursue a three-stage effort to limit their nuclear weapons arsenal. Includes agreement to a START III level of 1,000 deployed strategic warheads; Agreement in principle to carefully designed amendments to the ABM Treaty to permit a missile...
- Iran Cannot Be Contained. Williams, Ed // American Diplomacy;9/6/2010, p1
The article reviews the article "Iran Cannot Be Contained," by Bret Stephens, which appeared at http://www.commentarymagazine.com/viewarticle.cfm/iran-cannot-be-contained-15462.
- Mixed prospects at best for new START/ABM talks. Mann, Paul // Aviation Week & Space Technology;8/16/1999, Vol. 151 Issue 7, p74
Focuses on nuclear arms control negotiations between the United States and Russia as of August 16, 1999. Political factors affecting the negotiations; Presidential elections in Russia and the US in the year 2000; National missile defense program of the US.


