North Korea food and nukes: 5 key questions

North Korea’s new leader, Kim Jong-un, is accusing the United States of politicizing food aid by linking it to a long-standing demand that North Korea halt its nuclear program. Despite the angry tone of North Korea’s message, the country has signaled an openness to pursuing a “food for nukes” deal with the US, something that was under consideration before former president Kim Jong-il died last month. Here are five key questions:

Korean Central News Agency via Korea News Service/AP
In this undated photo released Wednesday, Jan. 11, by the Korean Central News Agency and distributed Thursday, Jan. 12, in Tokyo by the Korea News Service, North Korea's new leader Kim Jong Un inspects the Pyongyang Folk Park under construction in Pyongyang, North Korea.

1. How did aid first get linked to North Korea’s nukes?

Aided by years of Soviet nuclear assistance, North Korea began building a 5-megawatt nuclear reactor in 1979 at Yongbyon, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).  It was not until late 1985, however, that the country declared the existence of the facility to the IAEA as a condition of joining the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).
Nearly 20 years after joining the NPT, North Korea threatened to quit, setting off an 18-month crisis. In the spring of 1994 US President Bill Clinton signed an Agreed Framework with the country to put its nuclear ambitions on hold in exchange for US aid. This came after the US considered a strike against the nuclear facility and pushed the United Nations for sanctions on North Korea.
A light water reactor, unable to produce weapons-grade plutonium, was promised to North Korea as a part of the Agreed Framework for giving up its nuclear weapons. Construction on the project has since been suspended. In 2003, North Korea officially quit the NPT.

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