Korea nuclear roll-back starts well - US

North Korea's first steps to roll back its nuclear programme are going well, a US official said today.

North Korea's first steps to roll back its nuclear programme are going well, a US official said today.

The Koreans struck a deal with regional powers last month to disable its Soviet-era nuclear complex in exchange for aid and an end to its international ostracism.

I think we are off to a good start
US State Department official Sung Kim

"I think we are off to a good start," US State Department official Sung Kim said after visiting a plutonium-producing atomic complex. Mr Kim was with a team of US nuclear specialists who arrived in North Korea last week.

He said there have been steps to reverse the operations at all three of the key facilities - the North's ageing reactor, a plant that produces nuclear fuel and another that turns spent fuel in arms-grade plutonium.

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The deal calls for North Korea to disable these three plants by the end of the year, provide a complete list of its nuclear arms activity and account for all its fissile material.

In exchange, the impoverished North will receive a million tonnes of heavy fuel oil or equivalent aid. The United States will also move toward taking North Korea off its terrorism blacklist.