"Bill Clinton gave North Korea $5 billion and two nuclear reactors in 1994, essentially giving them nukes."
— Viral image on Wednesday, August 9th, 2017 in a Twitter post
Viral image wrongly blames Bill Clinton for giving North Korea the means to make nuclear weapons
By Joshua Gillinon Wednesday, August 9th, 2017 at 4:03 p.m.
This meme blaming
former President Bill Clinton for North Korea's nuclear program started
appearing mid rising tensions between the country and the United
States.
A viral meme spreading through Twitter blames former
President Bill Clinton for not just allowing North Korea to develop
nuclear weapons, but fostering their program more than two decades ago.
"Bill Clinton gave North Korea $5 billion and two nuclear reactors in
1994, essentially giving them nukes," read the meme we first noticed on Aug. 9, 2017.
It included an image that showed Clinton seated next to late North
Korean leader Kim Jong Il. It’s worth noting that the photograph is actually from Aug. 4, 2009, when Clinton traveled to Pyongyang to negotiate the release of two American journalists. Kim Jong Il died two years later.
The meme popped up after revelations that Kim Jong Un’s regime had potentially developed miniaturized nuclear devices capable of fitting inside intercontinental ballistic missiles.
The center of this claim — that Clinton negotiated a deal with North
Korea that included two reactors — is based on a real agreement. But
there are significant problems with the assertion that Clinton paid the
country $5 billion, "essentially giving them nukes."
The Agreed Framework
While president, Clinton did broker a deal with North Korea, amid
revelations that the country was building a full-scale processing
facility to produce plutonium.
North Korea had kicked international inspectors out of the country in 1993, announcing its intention to pull out of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, an international agreement North Korea had joined in 1985.
By then, the North Koreans had separated enough plutonium from spent fuel
from a reactor it had built while Clinton was governor of Arkansas to
create a couple of nuclear weapons, according to Joshua Pollack, a
senior research associate at the James Martin Center for
Nonproliferation Studies at the Middlebury Institute of International
Studies at Monterey.
In October 1994, Clinton arranged a deal with incoming leader Kim Jong Il, whose father Kim Il Sung had died in July.
North Korea would have to take its current reactor offline and stop
construction of two other reactors they said were for electricity.
In exchange, the United States would help the country build two so-called light-water nuclear reactors
to produce power for the country. The light-water reactors would make
it harder for North Korea to produce weapons-grade material. Those
reactors were estimated to cost about $4 billion, and would be financed
by South Korea, Japan, and possibly Germany, Russia and the United
States, the Washington Post reported.
In addition, the United States would help provide heavy fuel oil to
North Korea, which would have to halt plans to produce nuclear weapons
and submit to international inspections. It would have to surrender
spent nuclear fuel once the new reactors were built.
The deal, which did not require congressional approval, was referred
to as the Agreed Framework. Clinton hailed it as a path to easing
sanctions and normalizing diplomatic relations.
"This agreement will help achieve a longstanding and vital American
objective — an end to the threat of nuclear proliferation on the Korean
Peninsula," Clinton said of the deal.
End of the deal
Spoiler: The Agreed Framework failed.
North Korea accelerated its efforts to enrich uranium, which wasn’t a
direct violation of the framework, and accused the United States of
reneging on fuel oil promises. That certainly irked the George W. Bush
administration, which cut off fuel oil shipments in 2002.
North Korea withdrew from the agreement, ending its obligation to
abide by the deal’s terms. By 2006, North Korea claimed it had successfully tested a nuclear device.
To say that Clinton’s deal was the culprit is wrong, however.
Richard Nephew, a senior research scholar at Columbia University’s
Center on Global Energy Policy, said that while the Agreed Framework was
flawed, it impeded North Korea’s ambitions. The meme misrepresented
much about the deal.
"This is a problem that is years in the making, owned by bipartisan
administrations, and — for a time, anyway — delayed by President Clinton
rather than him giving North Korea nuclear weapons," Nephew said.
Importantly, Clinton didn’t give North Korea two reactors, because the construction was never completed.
You can even look up the unfinished sites online.
And the $5 billion figure the viral image cited wasn’t cash, but
likely included the construction costs of the reactors (which were never
completed) and energy aid. The Congressional Research Service noted in a
2014 report that the United States provided more than $400 million in heavy fuel oil to North Korea between 1995 and 2003.
The consortium created to oversee the reactors’ construction, the
Korean Peninsula Energy Development Organization, still exists on paper.
It officially ended the light-water reactor project, but is still working "to settle financial and legal obligations stemming from the termination."
"All the North Koreans got out of it in the end is that they stole
the construction equipment" for the reactors, Pollack said. "They also
learned a few things about building that type of reactor. They’ve tried
to make a small initial one themselves, but it appears to have been
stalled for years now."
In the meantime, Pollack added, the North Koreans have created enough
plutonium and enriched enough uranium to create as many as 60 nuclear
bombs.
Our ruling
An image circulating on the Internet claims "Bill Clinton gave North
Korea $5 billion and two nuclear reactors in 1994, essentially giving
them nukes."
Clinton did negotiate a deal in 1994 to provide two nuclear reactors
and provide heavy fuel oil to North Korea in exchange for the country
giving up its nuclear weapons program.
That's about where the truth of this image stops. The energy aid
costs didn’t approach anywhere near $5 billion, and the reactors were
never built. North Korea had continued to enrich uranium on its own,
leading the Bush administration to end the deal. The agreement, while a
failure, didn’t give North Korea nuclear weapons. Experts said the
agreement actually slowed North Korea down.
We rate this statement False.
Share The Facts
Internet rumors
Viral image
"Bill Clinton gave North Korea $5 billion and two nuclear reactors in 1994, essentially giving them nukes."