U.S. will withdraw "immediately" to North Korea from the list of countries supporting terrorism whether to accept a mechanism for monitoring its nuclear facilities, said Saturday in Beijing on U.S. negotiator Christopher Hill.
"I want to emphasize that not try to verify his statement now, we try to establish rules on how the check in the future," explained to the press, referring to the document issued in June by North Korea in which supposedly describes its nuclear facilities.
"Our goal is to reach the implementation of a verification protocol. Then withdraw immediately," he said after meeting with their Chinese counterparts, South Korean and Japanese in Beijing.
Pyongyang announced in late August cessation of the dismantling of its nuclear facilities and could reactivate the Yongbyon complex.
North Korea accuses the United States which has not withdrawn from its list of countries that support terrorism, which prevents it from benefiting from U.S. aid and block loans from international organizations.
North Korea conducted an atomic bomb test in 2006. The following year an agreement was reached between six countries (the two Koreas, U.S., Japan, China and Russia) on the denuclearization of Pyongyang, but the process is going through ups and downs for several months