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U.S. Pact With North Korea Welcomed With Caution

IN THIS ISSUE: N. Korea's pact with U.S. welcomed with caution, India to take up NSG membership issue at Vienna, new Iran sanctions go into effect, Herrera says Mexico should turn to more nuclear power, NATO chief says missile defense talks at standstill, world's oldest nuclear plant shuts in UK.

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Published on March 1, 2012

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In This Issue
North Korea's Pact With U.S. Is Welcomed With Caution
Wall Street Journal
India to Take Up NSG Membership Issue at Vienna Meet
Hindu
New Iran Sanctions Go Into Effect
Hill
Mexico's Energy Minister Says Country Should Turn to More Nuclear Power
Bloomberg News
NATO Chief Says Missile Defense Talks With Russia at Standstill
Global Security Newswire
World's Oldest Nuclear Plant Shuts in Britain
World Nuclear News

North Korea's Pact With U.S. Is Welcomed With Caution

Evan Ramstad | Wall Street Journal

Soltanieh

North Korea's neighbors on Thursday praised its latest diplomatic deal with the U.S., but none said the pact would quickly lead to similar bilateral arrangements or broader negotiations on disarmament and peace.

The U.S. and North Korea on Wednesday announced North Korea would freeze development of its nuclear-weapons arsenal and long-range missiles and allow international inspectors to visit its main nuclear facility for the first time since 2009. The U.S., meanwhile, will deliver 240,000 metric tons of nutritional assistance over the next year or so.

The North painted the announcement as a deal, while the U.S. said it doesn't link humanitarian help with political matters but went along with Pyongyang because "they needed to have this linkage," a senior Obama administration official told reporters. Full Article



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India to Take Up NSG Membership Issue at Vienna Meet
Sandeep Dikshit | Hindu
Foreign Secretary Ranjan Mathai will put forward India's case for joining the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) at an outreach meeting with the world body's key members in Vienna on Thursday.     Full Article

New Iran Sanctions Go Into Effect
Erik Wasson | Hill
On Wednesday a new set of sanctions on Iran that Congress passed in December went into effect. Obama administration officials said the tightening sanctions are having an effect, although Iran has not yet made significant concessions on its nuclear energy program.     Full Article

Mexico's Energy Minister Says Country Should Turn to More Nuclear Power
Carlos Manuel Rodriguez | Bloomberg News
Mexico should turn to nuclear power to reach renewable energy goals and could "easily" build two more reactors at its Laguna Verde plant, Energy Minister Jordy Herrera said. "It's time to put nuclear power on the table," Herrera said during an event in Mexico City today.     Full Article

NATO Chief Says Missile Defense Talks With Russia at Standstill
Global Security Newswire
NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen on Tuesday acknowledged that the military alliance's negotiations with Russia on missile defense collaboration had come to a standstill. The sides in November 2010 agreed to pursue avenues for cooperation as the United States and NATO developed a missile shield intended to cover Europe.    Full Article

World's Oldest Nuclear Plant Shuts in Britain
World Nuclear News
Unit 1 at the UK's Oldbury plant - the world's oldest operating nuclear power reactor - has been closed after 44 years of power generation. Construction of a new plant is planned at the site. Power generation at the 217 MWe unit was stopped at 11:00am Wednesday, marking the end of 44 years' of electricity production at the Magnox plant.     Full Article

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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