WORl PHE BATTALK ighdai ad Internals humanitarian dig 1 ; will be arriving alt( newly built ai An Kawii Marines pulled c: of Baghdad:' Sunday, heading southern Iraq tote up new posita The Army's i: Infantry, Armored and It Airborne Divi® will control Bagte and the noi% -— half of the comti ubaydiyah Kut * Amarali vaniyah Nasiriyah q uto i Ur* . Rumeila ' * Safwan • , Umm Qasr Kuwait CHy 0 0 100 mi into the power emporarily leadi ion of Iraq. Iraq, Shiite pilp; by the thousand :s and Chrislii rches for Easter,^ ice to religious ra ppressed in their Hussein, e were fears, dairies that hadte and sometimes h ept in check m tnd consume Emmanuel Del ter 40 years Chaldean Catio: pealed for const tections for Ira istian minority rated Christian pr; rluding 30 Bagkj must be returned. NATION THE BATTALION 7A Monday, April 21, 2003 Bush believes N. Korea can end nuclear program By Jennifer Loven ASSOCIATED PRESS . CRAWFORD, Texas — Days ahead of scheduled talks with North Korea, President Bush on Sunday gave diplomatic pressure a “good chance” of succeeding in coaxing Pyongang to end its tension-producing nuclear weapons programs. Along with the United States, regional neighbors China, Japan and South Korea are opposed to a nuclear-armed North Korea. Bush cited that unanimity of purpose — if not of strategy — as reason for optimism. believe that all four of us ejworking together have a good chance of convincing North Korea to abandon her ambitions to develop nuclear arsenals,” Bush told reporters. The president, taking a Five- day vacation at his central Texas ranch, spoke after attend ing Easter services at nearby Fort Hood. He also lauded China’s acces sion to host talks with North Korea, planned for as early as this week, as a good sign. “The key thing in the North Korea agenda is that China is assuming a very important responsibility,” he said. “China’s policy is for a nuclear-weapons- free peninsula. And now that they’re engaged in the process, it makes it more likely that’s going to occur.” The United States has insist ed on a multilateral approach to defuse the nuclear standoff, rather than the direct U.S.- North Korea engagement that Pyongang had been demanding. But the talks — which would be the first substantive discus sions since U.S. officials said in October that North Korea had acknowledged the existence of a uranium-based nuclear weapons program — were thrown into doubt on Friday when North Korea appeared to announce it had taken steps that could yield six to eight bombs within months. u The key thing in the North Korea agenda is that China is assuming a very important responsibility. — George W. Bush President Later, it became unclear whether the work had actually begun or the translation was faulty. U.S. and South Korean officials said there is no proof that reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel rods was underway, and suggested the report may have been a mistranslation of the vaguely worded Korean version. The United States believes North Korea already has one or two nuclear bombs and can extract enough plutonium from the fuel rods to make several more within months. Bush, asked about the talks announced last week, did not directly address whether they will take place. And a Bush spokeswoman said afterward that the presi dent’s reference to China’s involvement should not be taken as an indication the talks are definitely on. Consultations with allies in the region continue and no final decision has been made, deputy press secretary Claire Buchan said. Earlier Sunday, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee said he thought the meeting would go ahead. “China’s the key here, and China has made some signifi cant changes here just recently in their attitude to North Korea,” Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., told “Fox News Sunday.” Bush’s upbeat outlook on what Roberts called the “number one” security threat facing the United States contrasted, howev er, with another angry pro nouncement from North Korea. In the state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper, the commu nist government said Sunday that North and South Koreans “should firmly unite as one to resolutely smash the U.S. moves for a war of aggression in order to protect the destiny of the nation and the future of a reuni fied country.” The statement underscored the huge task ahead for the talks, if they proceed. North Korea repeatedly has accused the United States of planning to attack it after the Iraq war, a charge denied by Washington. The North has often tried to drive a wedge between South Korea and its chief ally, the United States. And though North Korea has never admitted or denied having nuclear bombs, it has closely guarded what it sees as its right to develop them. Feds investigating double agent By Danny Pollock ASSOCIATED PRESS 0 LOS ANGELES — Katrina Leung was a epublican political activist, a prominent Southern "alifornia businesswoman and an FBI informer laid $1.7 million for her work and expenses over wo decades. It was in the latter role, authorities allege, that he developed sexual relationships with two FBI lounterinteliigence agents and was able to steal J.S. secrets for the Chinese government. As the suspected double agent now sits in a fed- ral detention center, authorities are trying to letermine just how much damage she did to U.S. ntelligence efforts and weapons programs. “This is not a pretty story about our intelligence ommunity,” said Michael Greenberger, a former ustice Department official in the Clinton adminis- ration who is now a law professor at the Jniversity of Maryland Center for Health and domeland Security. “If this is the quality of intel- igence going on, it raises real questions.” Court documents accuse Leung, 49, of a long list severe security breaches, including tipping off Chinese authorities to U.S. agents looking for tuclear secrets in China, and revealing names of FBI igents investigating Chinese spying in this country. FBI Director Robert Mueller has said the ban ning of intelligence assets needs to be over- tauled to prevent such breaches in the future. And ourt documents filed by the U.S. attorney's iffice say the FBI will have to reassess all of its ictions and intelligence analyses involving eung’s activities. “A central goal of this reassessment will be to determine which foreign counterintelligence investigations have been thwarted or compro mised by her communication of information to her People’s Republic of China handlers as well as by disinformation she may have provided her FBI handlers,” according to the documents filed by the U.S. attorney’s office. Among the accusations against Leung is one that she gave Chinese officials the name of an FBI agent who went to China in 1992 after investigat ing a critical nuclear espionage case in this country in the 1980s. “Such surveillance could well reveal FBI coun terintelligence techniques and persons of interest to the FBI,” the court documents state. The documents do not name the man, but sever al law enforcement officials confirmed to The Associated Press that he was William Cleveland Jr., the lead FBI agent in an investigation that tar geted an alleged attempt by China to steal neutron bomb secrets. Cleveland had been having an affair with Leung since 1988, according to the records. The court filings contain limited details about the extent of Leung's activities. But in denying her bail, U.S. Magistrate Judge Victor B. Kenton said Leung could be a flight risk because she had access to about $872,000 in U.S. bank accounts and per haps millions more in foreign banks. Leung was arrested April 9 and charged with unauthorized copying of national defense informa tion with the intent to injure the .United States or benefit a foreign nation. Her lawyers said she was a loyal American who was given documents by the FBI to pass on to China as part of an intelligence strategy. 8.CO0 i8 Texas A&M University Campus Master Plan PUBLIC FORUM * Presentation/Questions & Answers Monday, April 21, 2003 3:00-5:00p.m., Rudder Theater Get a view of how the campus plan is shaping up. Come tell us what you think. For additional information, call 845-0555 or visit the website at http://www.tamu.edu/campusplan. EU-U.S. Research and Public Policy Symposium Faculty, staff and students are invited to participate in a symposium, which will address the linkage between research and public policy in the EU and the U.S. and offer ideas and suggestions on building research partnerships with the European Union. Wednesday, April 23 6 p.m., Panel Discussion: “The Interface Between Research and Public Policy in the EU and the U.S.” Thursday, April 24 8:30 a.m., Panel Discussion: “Prospects of Research Collaboration Between the EU and the U.S pO v> 10 a.m., Roundtable Discussions: Concurrent discussions among Texas A&M faculty, panelists, and potential research collaborators from EU institutions. Panelists: • Dr. Enric Banda, Secretary-General, European Science Foundation • Dr. Alessandro Dantiani, Head of Science, Technology and Education, Delegation of the European Commission • Dr. Albert H. Teich, Director of Science & Policy Programs, American Association for the Advancement of Science • Dr. Jeanne Hudson, European Union Regional Director, Office of International Science and Engineering, National Science Foundation • Dr. William Hallman, Associate Director for the Food Biotechnology Program, Food Policy Institute, Rutgers University •Dr. Laurent Buisson, Scientific Attache, Office for Science and Technology, French Embassy to the U.S. To be held at: The Leonore and Walter Annenberg Presidential Conference Center Bush Presidential Library Complex • Texas A&M University For more information call 862-6700 or visit: http://international.tamu.edu/eucenter/Events.htm No registration required • Admission free r-» recsports ATTENTION! Dor* loo 1*0 imp|j The Department is implementing cost cutting initiatives, beginning in May, in an effort to preserve our financial integrity until we have the opportunity to present another referendum in the Spring of 2004. The initiative that will affect students directly is the reduction in operating hours of the Student Rec Center and other recreational facilities. For a full list of all our new facility hours or if you have any questions relating to Department of Rec Sports budget issues, please refer to the New Facility Hours FAQ available at http://recsports.tamu.edu. Student Rec Center Hours Effective May 9 11111 SUMMER Monday-Friday Saturday: Sunday: 6:00am-10:00pm 10:00am-9:00pm Noon-10:00pm FALL/SPRING Monday-Friday: 6:00am-11:00pm Saturday: 10:00am-10:00pm Sunday: Noon-TLOOpm . Wk i recsports. tame, edu TEXAS IKK SPORTS