WASHINGTON - The Bush administration is said to be nearing a decision to remove North Korea from its terrorism blacklist.
Diplomats say the announcement could come at any time in a bid to salvage faltering nuclear disarmament talks. U.S. officials say no final decision had been made but diplomats briefed on the matter believe an announcement that North Korea will be tentatively taken off the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism is imminent.
The delisting depends on North Korea agreeing to a plan to verify an account of its nuclear activity that it submitted over the summer.
The diplomats say North Korea would be put back on the list if it doesn't comply with the plan and abandon nuclear arms.
The diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of an expected announcement.
It would follow meetings last week in Pyongyang between North Korean officials and U.S. envoy Christopher Hill as well as days of intense debate in Washington.
The move would be a last-ditch attempt to save a disarmament agreement that has frayed badly in recent months as North Korea moves to restart its main nuclear plant.
It is also taking other provocative steps such as expelling UN inspectors and launching short-range missiles.
Saving the deal and getting Pyongyang to follow through would also be a major foreign policy success for the U.S. administration in its waning months.
But opponents of the deal, mainly conservative hawks in and out of the administration, say removing the North from the terrorism list now would be a reward for bad behaviour from a country that cannot be trusted.
North Korea had disabled its Yongbyon nuclear facility under the initial phases of the deal but since August has been reversing that process.
It's because the United States has not removed it from the terror list as it agreed after North Korea provided a declaration of its atomic program in June.
The U.S. has said it will fulfill the obligation only when North Korea accepts a plan to verify that accounting.
While he was in North Korea, Hill proposed a face-saving compromise under which the North would be provisionally removed from the terrorism list as soon as it deposits with China an agreement on verification, according to U.S. officials.
China, the chair of the six-nation nation negotiations, would then announce that the North Koreans were on board, allowing Pyongyang to claim that Washington moved first, they said.