The Star Malaysia

Tight grip on nukes

Pyongyang will never fully give up weapons, says top defector

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Top defector says North Korea may never completely give up its nuclear weapons.

SEOUL: North Korea will never completely give up its nuclear weapons, a top defector said ahead of leader Kim Jong-un’s landmark summit with US President Donald Trump next month.

The current whirlwind of diplomacy and negotiatio­ns will not end with “a sincere and complete disarmamen­t” but with “a reduced North Korean nuclear threat”, said Thae Yong-ho, who fled his post as the North’s deputy ambassador to Britain in August 2016.

“In the end, North Korea will remain ‘a nuclear power packaged as a non-nuclear state’,” Thae told the South’s Newsis news agency.

His remarks come ahead of an unpreceden­ted summit between Kim and Trump in Singapore on June 12 where North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes are expected to dominate the agenda.

North and South Korea affirmed their commitment to the goal of denucleari­sation of the peninsula at a summit last month, and Pyongyang announced at the weekend it will destroy its only known nuclear test site next week.

But it has not made public what concession­s it is offering.

Washington is seeking the “complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­sation (CVID)” of the North and stresses that verificati­on will be key.

Pyongyang has said it does not need nuclear weapons if the security of its regime is guaranteed.

But Thae, one of the highest rank- ing officials to have defected in recent years, said: “North Korea will argue that the process of nuclear disarmamen­t will lead to the collapse of North Korea and oppose CVID.”

The North wanted to ensure Kim’s “absolute power” and its model of hereditary succession, he added, and would oppose intrusive inspection­s as they “would be viewed as a process of breaking down Kim’s absolute power in front of the eyes of ordinary North Koreans and elites”.

At a party meeting last month when Kim proclaimed the developmen­t of the North’s nuclear force complete and promised no more nuclear or missile tests, he called its arsenal “a powerful treasured sword for defending peace”.

“Giving it up soon after Kim himself labelled it the ‘treasured sword for defending peace’ and a firm guarantee for the future? It can never happen,” Thae said.

Tensions on and around the peninsula had been mounting for years as Pyongyang’s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes saw it subjected to multiple rounds of increasing­ly strict sanctions by the UN Security Council, the US, EU, South Korea and others.

Trump last year threatened the North with “fire and fury”.

But since the Winter Olympics in the South, Pyongyang and Washington have agreed to the unpreceden­ted Singapore meeting. —

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