Cape Breton Post

North Korea official calls U.S. efforts to rid nukes a ‘wild dream’

- BY EDITH M. LEDERER

North Korea’s deputy UN ambassador said Friday that U.S. efforts to get rid of his country’s nuclear weapons through military threats and sanctions are “a wild dream.”

Kim In Ryong told The Associated Press that North Korea’s nuclear weapons are never part of “political bargains and economic deals.”

“In a nutshell, DPRK have already declared not to attend any type of talks which would discuss its nuclear abandonmen­t, nuclear disbandmen­t,” he said, using the acronym for the country’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Kim reiterated North Korea’s longstandi­ng contention that its nuclear program “is the product of the United States hostile policy towards DPRK.”

“That is why every solution will be possible when the United States hostile policy is withdrawn in advance,” he said.

Kim “categorica­lly rejected” Friday’s UN Security Council meeting on the North Korean nuclear issue — which his country declined to attend — as “another abuse” of the council’s authority, acting on instructio­ns of the United States which is a veto-wielding member.

The United States holds the council presidency this month and organized the ministeria­l session that U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson chaired.

Tillerson called for new sanctions on North Korea and urged all countries to exert pressure on Pyongyang and implement the six UN sanctions resolution­s. He also stressed that the Trump administra­tion will only engage in talks with Pyongyang when it exhibits “a good faith commitment” to implement Security Council resolution­s “and their past promises to end their nuclear programs.”

Kim responded saying: “As we expected, (the) U.S. has taken issue with self-defensive nuclear deterrent of the DPRK, and not only to justify their anti-DPRK aggressive war racket but also to create atmosphere for sanctions against DPRK at any cost.”

He said the United States “is wholly to blame for pushing the situation on the Korean Peninsula to the brink of a nuclear war by staging the largest-ever joint aggression military drills against the DPRK for the past two months” and deploying “nuclear strategic assets” to South Korea.

While the United States once talked about nuclear disarmamen­t, Kim said it is spending a trillion dollars “in a bid to secure a nuclear edge” — and he said this issue should be addressed “before tabling the denucleari­zation of the DPRK.”

“The nuclear force of the DPRK just serves as a treasured sword of justice and creditable war deterrent to protect the sovereignt­y and dignity of the country and global peace from the U.S. threat to ignite a nuclear war,” Kim said.

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