•
Motivation : North Korea announced intention to withdraw from
NPT and
non-compliance with
IAEA safeguards. •
Signed Date: 21 October 1994 by American ambassador
Robert Gallucci and North Korean vice minister
Kang Sok-ju •
Summary: Freeze of North Korean nuclear program, leading to
denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula, and initial
Peace agreement between the
United States and North Korea The main provisions of the agreement were: • DPRK's graphite-moderated 5MWe
nuclear reactor, and the 50 MWe and 200 MWe reactors under construction, which could easily produce weapons grade
plutonium, would be replaced with two 1000MW
light water reactors (LWR) power plants by a target date of 2003. • Oil for heating and electricity production would be provided while DPRK's reactors were shut down and construction halted, until completion of the first LWR power unit. The amount of oil was 500,000 tons of heavy fuel oil per year. • The two sides would move toward full normalization of political and economic relations. • The U.S. would provide formal
peace and
national security assurances to the DPRK, against the threat or use of nuclear weapons by the U.S. • The DPRK would take steps to implement the 1992
Joint Declaration of the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula between South and North Korea. • The DPRK would remain a party to the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. •
IAEA ad hoc and routine inspections would resume for facilities not subject to the freeze. • Existing spent nuclear fuel stocks would be stored and ultimately disposed of without
reprocessing in the DPRK. • Before delivery of key LWR nuclear components, the DPRK would come into full compliance with its safeguards agreement with the IAEA. There were also some confidential minutes supporting the agreement, which have not been made public. These are reported to include that full-scope IAEA safeguards would be applied when the major non-nuclear components of the first LWR unit were completed but before the delivery of key nuclear components. The commitments in the agreement were voluntary and non-binding, not approved by the
United States Senate as with a
treaty, though noted by the
United Nations Security Council. It was signed in the wake of North Korea's 90-day advance notification of its intended withdrawal from the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (which North Korea "suspended" after 89 days), a U.S. military buildup near the country, and U.S. plans to bomb the active
Yongbyon nuclear reactor. The U.S. regarded the Agreed Framework primarily as a non-proliferation agreement, whereas North Korea placed greater value on measures normalizing relations with the U.S. Terms of the pact and consequent agreements included the shutdown of the pilot
Yongbyon nuclear reactor, abandoning the construction of two larger nuclear power plants, and the canning and sealing, under
IAEA monitoring, of spent fuel that could have been reprocessed to create plutonium for a
nuclear weapon. In exchange two
light water reactors would be constructed in North Korea by 2003 at a cost of $4 billion, primarily supplied by South Korea. In the interim, North Korea would be supplied with 500,000 tons of
heavy fuel oil annually, at no cost, to make up for lost energy production. North Korea was required to come into full compliance with its IAEA safeguards agreement, allowing the IAEA to verify the correctness and completeness of its initial declaration, before key nuclear components of the reactor would be delivered. When the LWR plants were completed, North Korea would dismantle its other nuclear reactors and associated facilities. The
Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization (KEDO) is a consortium of the United States, South Korea, Japan, and various other states that is responsible for implementing the energy-related parts of the agreement. North Korea would repay KEDO over a 20-year interest-free period after the completion of each LWR plant. It was reported that
US President Bill Clinton's officials agreed to the plan only because they thought that the North Korean government would collapse before the nuclear power project was completed as North Korea's leader
Kim Il Sung had recently died. North Korean officials at the time also suspected the U.S. anticipated an early collapse of the DPRK. ==Implementation of the agreement==