Appearing as a guest on tonight's episode of the O'Reilly Factor
(Mon. 3/20/06),
Medea Benjamin, a cofounder of the far-left group
Code Pink,
made the claim that "North Korea does not have a nuclear weapon."
An overwhelming mountain of evidence
suggests otherwise.
In October 2002, North Korea publicly admitted to having a nuclear
weapons program (see
here and
here). This was a clear violation of the 1994 agreement it made
under the Clinton administration not to seek to build nuclear weapons.
(By the way, there may be evidence that President Clinton knew as
President that North Korea was breaking its promise [see
this]).
In April 2003, in three-way talks with China, North Korea
told the United States that it had nuclear weapons (here
and
here).
In February 2005, Defense Intelligence Agency analysts "were reported to
believe that North Korea may already have produced as many as 12
to 15 nuclear weapons" (source,
emphasis added). (See also
this.) Even
Democratic Senators Carl Levin and Hillary Clinton have written that
North Korea may have many nuclear weapons.
In September 2005, it was reported that North Korea agreed to
"abandon its nuclear weapons programs." Follow-through on this
agreement remains another matter, however. Since November, nuclear talks
"have been on haitus" and
"negotiations have bogged down."
It's quite unlikely that Benjamin can provide any evidence for her
claim. In
a January 2006, 60 Minutes report, a North Korean general
told CBS, "What we can say to you definitely right now is that we
currently have nuclear weapons."
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From tonight's O'Reilly Factor (Mon. 3/20/06) (audiotape on file) (emphasis
mine), discussing the issue of Iran obtaining nuclear weapons:
MEDEA BENJAMIN: I believe in working through the
international community -- (crosstalk) --
BILL O'REILLY: Just like we worked through in
international community with North Korea.
BENJAMIN: Well, we are working through the international
community --
O'REILLY: They did not have the bomb that they lied
to us about --
BENJAMIN: No, they do not have the bomb just like
Iran doesn't have the bomb.
O'REILLY: So North Korea, in your opinion --
(crosstalk) -- North Korea in your opinion, does not have a nuclear
weapon? Is that what you just said?
BENJAMIN: North Korea does not have a nuclear
weapon. We know that North Korea doesn't have a nuclear
weapon. Whether they are trying to get a nuclear weapon is
another issue.
O'REILLY: I believe - I believe when you go back, and you
talk to your people, they will correct you on that. They do have
a nuclear weapon in North Korea, and the reason they do is because
they lied to us in the Clinton administration and developed it ...
That's O.K., Bill. We're happy correct Ms. Benjamin right here.