Manila Bulletin

War's end can't be bargaining chip for denucleari­zation – N. Korea

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SEOUL (Reuters) – North Korea said on Tuesday that declaring the end of the 1950-53 Korean War “can never be a bargaining chip” for getting North Korea denucleari­zed, and said the country “will not particular­ly hope for it” if the United States does not want the end of war, according to state media KCNA.

In a joint statement with South Korean President Moon Jae-in in their Pyongyang summit last month, North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un expressed willingnes­s to “permanentl­y dismantle” the Yongbyon nuclear complex if the United States takes correspond­ing action.

Moon said this would include a declaratio­n of an official end to the war.

In a commentary, KCNA said on Tuesday that declaring the war’s end should have “been resolved half a century ago,” and called it “the most basic and primary process for the establishm­ent of new DPRK-US relations and peace” on the Korean peninsula “to which the US was also committed,” referring to North Korea by its official name, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

At their unpreceden­ted summit in June, US President Donald Trump and Kim agreed in broad terms to “build a lasting and stable peace regime on the Korean Peninsula.”

However, Washington wants North Korea to first provide a complete inventory of its weapons programs and take irreversib­le steps to give up its arsenal.

KCNA said the Yongbyon nuclear facility, which the North expressed a willingnes­s to take offline if the United States takes correspond­ing action, “is a core one for its nuclear program.”

“The DPRK is taking substantia­l and crucial steps to implement the joint statement made at the DPRK-US summit, but the US is still trying to subdue someone by resorting to sanctions,” the unnamed commentary accused.

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