The Jerusalem Post

Harris denounces N. Korea’s ‘brutal dictatorsh­ip’

US vice president visits heavily armed Korean border as the North tests missiles

- • By TREVOR HUNNICUTT and HYONHEE SHIN

PANMUNJOM (Reuters) – US Vice President Kamala Harris said North Korea is a country with a “brutal dictatorsh­ip,” an illegal arms program and rampant human rights violations, issuing unusually strong criticism during a visit to the inter-Korean border on Thursday.

Harris, in her first visit to the Demilitari­zed Zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas, said the heavily armed border area offered a stark reminder of the “dramatical­ly different paths” the two sides have taken.

“In the North, we see a brutal dictatorsh­ip, rampant human rights violations and an unlawful weapons program that threatens peace and stability,” Harris said.

“The United States and the world seek a stable and peaceful Korean Peninsula where the DPRK is no longer a threat,” she said, referring to North Korea by the initials of its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

Harris was in the DMZ after arriving in the South Korean capital, Seoul, early on Thursday amid simmering regional tension over North Korea’s missile launches and China’s actions in the Taiwan Strait.

The visit by Harris to staunch US ally South Korea comes amid fears that North Korea is about to conduct a nuclear test. South Korean officials say North Korea has completed preparatio­ns for what would be its seventh nuclear test since 2006, and its first since 2017.

Harris and South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol held talks and condemned North Korea’s intensifyi­ng nuclear rhetoric and a series of missile tests, the latest of which was conducted on Wednesday.

“They condemned the DPRK’s provocativ­e nuclear rhetoric and ballistic missile launches,” a White House statement said. “They discussed our response to potential future provocatio­ns, including through trilateral cooperatio­n with Japan.”

Harris and Yoon reaffirmed a shared goal of the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula, the White House said.

Harris also reaffirmed a US-extended deterrence commitment to its Asian ally, including “the full range

of US defense capabiliti­es”, it added.

Yoon’s office said that if the North pushed ahead with serious provocatio­ns like a nuclear test, he and Harris had agreed to immediatel­y implement “jointly prepared countermea­sures”. It did not elaborate.

North Korea codified its right to use preemptive nuclear strikes in a

new law early this month. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has said it is developing nuclear weapons and missiles to defend against US threats.

On Taiwan, Harris underscore­d that efforts to preserve peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait were an “essential element of a free and open Indo-Pacific”, the

White House said.

US President Joe Biden’s aides have been shoring up alliances to manage China in the region, including over Taiwan.

But Yoon told CNN in an interview aired on Sunday that in a conflict over Taiwan, North Korea would be more likely to stage a provocatio­n and Seoul and Washington should focus on that concern first.

Aides said Harris’s DMZ visit, the first by a Biden administra­tion official, was intended to show unwavering US security commitment to South Korea.

The DMZ, regarded as the world’s last Cold War frontier, has existed since the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a armistice, not a peace treaty.

The trip took on urgency after North Korea fired two short-range missiles off its east coast on Wednesday, the second test since Sunday, while South Korea and the United States are holding naval exercises involving an aircraft carrier.

The South Korean and Japanese navies said they would hold trilateral anti-submarine exercises with US forces on Friday, designed to improve their capability to counter evolving North Korean threats, including its submarine-launched ballistic missiles.

The drills will involve warships including the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier, the USS Chancellor­sville guided-missile cruiser, the USS Barry guided missile destroyer, South Korea’s Munmu the Great Destroyer and Japan’s Asahi tanker.

Harris said in Japan, the first stop on her Asian tour, that North Korea’s missile launches were part of an “illicit weapons program which threatens regional stability.”

Harris and Yoon also discussed changes in US electric vehicle subsidies which South Korea fears could disadvanta­ge its automakers.

In addition, Harris met a group of South Korean women leaders including Choi Soo-yeon, CEO of internet service provider Naver Corp; Youn Yuh-jung, an actress who won an Oscar for her role in Minari; Kim Yuna, an Olympic figure skating champion; and novelist Kim Sagwa.

A White House official said the women had “made strides in building a more inclusive and equitable society.”

 ?? (Leah Millis/Pool/Reuters) ?? US VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris meets soldiers before her departure from the DMZ separating the two Koreas, in Panmunjom, South Korea, yesterday.
(Leah Millis/Pool/Reuters) US VICE PRESIDENT Kamala Harris meets soldiers before her departure from the DMZ separating the two Koreas, in Panmunjom, South Korea, yesterday.

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