North Korea is threatening to restore its plutonium-producing nuclear plant because it feels it can win more through brinkmanship than the aid it stands to lose, analysts said on Thursday. Each step the North makes to restore its Yongbyon nuclear plant squeezes regional powers to find a way to bring Pyongyang back to the bargaining table, while giving the impoverished state more cards to play once it returns, they said. “I would be surprised if they are pushing for a full-on breakdown and crisis,” said Peter Beck, a specialist in Korean affairs who teaches at American University in Washington. “At this point, I think it is just an attention-grabbing move to make North Korea a higher priority in Washington.” The International Atomic Energy Agency said on Wednesday that the North had expelled UN monitors from its Soviet-era nuclear plant and plans to start reactivating it next week, rolling back a disarmament-for-aid deal and putting pressure on Washington. In November, North Korea began to disable Yongbyon as part of the deal it reached with China, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the United States in steps designed to put the plant out of the business for at least a year. North Korea may be acting now because it feels it has the Bush administration, battling a financial crisis at home and diplomatic disputes with Russia, over a barrel, they said. The Bush team, looking to preserve its legacy with just a few months left in office, may be willing to offer last-ditch concessions and if not, Pyongyang will be in a stronger bargaining position when a new president takes office in January. “Bush, who hoped he would restore his reputation by North Korea's denuclearisation, is really in a quagmire and North Korea wouldn't miss out on this chance to put pressure on him,” said Park Yong-ho, at the Korea Institute for National Unification.Confronted with the apparent unravelling of a rare foreign policy achievement by the Bush administration, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said North Korea's actions had “by no means” killed off the country's nuclear disarmament. Carl Baker, a director at the Pacific Forum CSIS think tank in Hawaii, said: “Clearly, the Americans do not see the issue as being not negotiable any more. I would have to believe there has been some indication from the North Koreans that they are willing to talk.” What pyongyang wants One thing secretive North Korea may be hoping to win from the Bush administration is a flexible verification system that would keep inspectors from poking around in places Pyongyang does not want them to be, analysts said. Last month, North Korea said it planned to restart Yongbyon because it was angry at Washington for not taking it off its terrorism blacklist. Washington says it will de-list Pyongyang once it allows inspectors to verify claims it made about its nuclear inventory. The North, which said last week it did not care about removal from the terrorism list, may still be trying to get off the list because it stands to increase its meagre trade and better tap into international finance if de-listed, analysts said. Energy-starved North Korea, however, stands to lose out on the remainder of the 1 million tonnes of heavy fuel oil, or aid of similar value, that has been heading its way in pieces for progress it has previously made in the nuclear deal. – Reuters __