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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> The U.S. and South Korea are extending for two years their current
civilian nuclear agreement and postponing a contentious decision on whether
Seoul will be allowed to reprocess spent fuel as it seeks to
expand its atomic energy industry.Wednesday's announcement is a setback
to South Korea's new leader, Park Geun-hye, who had made revision of
the 39-year-old treaty one of her top election pledges, but it alleviates
a potential disagreement between the allies when Park visits Washington
in two weeks to meet with President Obama.State Department spokesman Patrick
Ventrell said the extension will provide more time for the two governments
to complete the complex negotiations on a successor agreement that will
recommence in June."These are very technical talks, and both parties felt
that we needed more time," he told reporters.South Korea is the world's
fifth-largest nuclear energy producer and is planning to expand domestic
use of nuclear power and exports of nuclear reactors. But its radioactive
waste storage is filling up, so it wants to be able to
reprocess spent plutonium. It also wants to be able enrich uranium, a
process that uranium must undergo to become a viable nuclear fuel. Currently,
South Korea has to get countries such as the U.S. and France
to do enrichment for it.Revising the agreement is a sensitive matter as
the same technologies can also be used to develop nuclear weapons. Washington
has historically opposed allowing repr
e did everything we could," one FBI source said, and their
assessment was based on the "totality of the evidence."The FBI insists,
despite suggestions to the contrary, that it was contacted only once by
the Russians about Tsarnaev.Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md., said Wednesday
that the U.S. made three inquiries with Russia about Tsarnaev and got
no response.Lawmakers and investigators are taking a close look at Tsarnaev's
trip to Russia in January 2012. His father says his son stayed
with him in Dagestan.Despite violence there, Anzor Tsarnaev said Sunday
that his son did not want to leave and had thoughts on
how he could go into business. But the father said he encouraged
him to go back to the U.S. and try to get citizenship.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev returned to the U.S. in July.His mother said that he
was questioned upon arrival at the airport in New York."And he told
me on the phone, 'Imagine, mama, they were asking me such interesting
questions as if I were some strange and scary man: Where did
you go? What did you do there?'" Zubeidat Tsarnaeva recalled her son
telling her at the time.Fox News' Mike Levine and Catherine Herridge and
the Associated Press contributed to this report.                        
                        
                        
                        
Miller Time: More politically correct madness
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