The Miracle

Kim says North Korea to show ‘new strategic weapon’ amid standoff with U.S.

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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has accused the United States of dragging its feet in nuclear negotiatio­ns and warned that his country will soon show a “new strategic weapon” to the world as its bolsters its nuclear deterrent in face of “gangster-like” U.S. sanctions and pressure. The North’s state media said Wednesday that Kim made the comments during a four-day ruling party conference held through Tuesday in the capital Pyongyang, where he declared that the North will never give up its security for economic benefits in the face of what he described as increasing U.S. hostility and nuclear threats.“The world will witness a new strategic weapon to be possessed by the DPRK in the near future,” the state-run Korean Central News Agency said, referring to the North by its formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. In an interview with Fox News Tuesday, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he hoped North Korea would “choose peace and prosperity over conflict and war.” In his latest comments on Tuesday in the United States, President Donald Trump said he had a good relationsh­ip with Kim and thought the North Korean leader would keep his word. “He likes me, I like him. We get along. He’s representi­ng his country, I’m representi­ng my country. We have to do what we have to do.“But he did sign a contract, he did sign an agreement talking about denucleari­sation,” Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida. Kim’s comments came after a months-long standoff between Washington and Pyongyang over disagreeme­nts involving disarmamen­t steps and the removal of sanctions imposed on the North.

“He said that we will never allow the impudent U.S. to abuse the DPRK-U.S. dialogue for meeting its sordid aim but will shift to a shocking actual action to make it pay for the pains sustained by our people so far and for the developmen­t so far restrained,” the KCNA said. Kim added that “if the U.S. persists in its hostile policy toward the DPRK, there will never be the denucleari­zation on the Korean Peninsula and the DPRK will steadily develop necessary and prerequisi­te strategic weapons for the security of the state until the U.S. rolls back its hostile policy,” according to the agency. However, Kim showed no clear indication of abandoning negotiatio­ns with the United States or restarting tests of nuclear bombs and interconti­nental ballistic missiles he had suspended under a self-imposed moratorium in 2018. He did issue a warning that there would be no grounds for the North to be “unilateral­ly bound” to the moratorium any longer, criticizin­g the United States for continuing its joint military exercises with rival South Korea and providing the South with advanced weaponry. Source: CBC News

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