The Jerusalem Post

Envoy: N. Korea ‘months away’ from nuke-strike capability on US territory

- By STEPHANIE NEBEHAY

GENEVA (Reuters) – North Korea is only months away from obtaining the capability to hit US territory with a nuclear weapon and must be disarmed, a US envoy said on Tuesday, dismissing Pyonyang’s diplomatic thaw with South Korea as a “charm offensive” that fooled no one.

In a diplomatic showdown at a UN-sponsored Conference on Disarmamen­t, North Korea responded by blaming Washington for escalating confrontat­ion, saying it was deploying nuclear assets including aircraft carriers near the divided peninsula and was considerin­g a preemptive strike against Pyongyang.

“North Korea has accelerate­d its provocativ­e pursuit of nuclear weapons and missile capabiliti­es, and expressed explicit threats to use nuclear weapons against the United States and its allies in the region,” US disarmamen­t ambassador Robert Wood told the Geneva forum.

“North Korean officials insist that they will not give up nuclear weapons, and North Korea may now be only months away from the capability to strike the United States with nuclear-armed ballistic missiles,” he said.

A US nuclear policy review outlined last week “reaffirms that North Korea’s illicit nuclear program must be completely, verifiably, and irreversib­ly eliminated, resulting in a Korean Peninsula free of nuclear weapons,” he said.

Asked later what the basis was for the assessment that North Korea would soon be able to hit the United States with a nuclear weapon, he said he had “no new informatio­n to share.”

North Korea tested its first interconti­nental ballistic missile, the Hwasong-14, twice last July. In November it tested the Hwasong-15, believed to be capable of reaching the continenta­l United States. It is not yet believed to have the capability to mount a nuclear warhead on a ballistic missile.

North Korea is under tightening UN Security Council sanctions for its banned nuclear and ballistic missile programs. But recent weeks have seen a thaw with South Korea, after Pyongyang agreed to send athletes to compete in the Olympic Games opening on Friday in the south.

“What I would call ‘the charm offensive’ frankly is fooling no one,” Wood told the talks.

He also said arsenals in China and Russia were expanding, drawing rebukes from their respective delegation­s.

“Russia, China and North Korea are growing their stockpiles, increasing the prominence of nuclear weapons in their security strategies, and – in some cases – pursuing the developmen­t of new nuclear capabiliti­es to threaten other peaceful nations,” Wood said.

“We are not going to stick our head in the sand, we are going to respond to these growing challenges,” he later told reporters.

North Korea accused the United States of seeking to aggravate the situation on the divided peninsula by “deploying large nuclear assets” nearby, laying the ground for a possible preemptive strike against it.

“In view of the nature and scale of US military reinforcem­ents, they are designed to make a preemptive strike against the DPRK,” North Korean diplomat Ju Yong Chol told the talks, referring to his country’s official name the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

“US officials including the defense secretary and the CIA director repeatedly talked about DPRK nuclear and missile threat to justify their argument for a military option and a new concept of a so-called ‘bloody nose’, a limited preemptive strike on the DPRK is under considerat­ion within the US administra­tion,” Ju said.

He said President Donald Trump’s ‘America First’ doctrine and US nuclear superiorit­y would endanger global peace and security and “trigger off a new nuclear arms race and could bring the whole world close to a horrible catastroph­e.”

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