Gulf News

‘Going nuclear’ only option - Pyongyang

State to strengthen its national nuclear armed forces in both quantity and quality, foreign minister says

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North Korea’s foreign minister on Friday told the United Nations that “going nuclear” is his country’s only way to defend itself and vowed to further bolster its nuclear military forces.

Speaking to the General Assembly, Ri Yong-ho said his country will “continue to take measures to strengthen its national nuclear armed forces in both quantity and quality.”

He spoke just two weeks after North Korea’s fifth and most powerful nuclear test provoked worldwide condemnati­on, prompting the UN Security Council to begin work on a new sanctions resolution.

“Going nuclear armed is the policy of our state,” Ri, who has been foreign minister since May, told the world gathering.

“As long as there exists a nuclear weapon state in hostile relations with the DPRK [North Korea], our national security and the peace on the Korean peninsula can be defended only with reliable nuclear deterrence,” he said.

North Korea has conducted two nuclear tests and testfired more than 20 missiles this year alone.

Advanced ability

After the latest blast on September 9, Pyongyang claimed it had significan­tly advanced its ability and tested a miniaturis­ed nuclear bomb for a warhead that could be mounted on a missile.

In his address, Ri acknowledg­ed that the nuclear tests “may not be easily understood by European countries,” which he said were now “less sensitive” to security concerns decades after the end of the Cold War.

But the foreign minister described the nuclear explosions as “practical countermea­sures” against the United States and a demonstrat­ion of the “strongest-ever will” of North Korea’s ruling party and people.

Japan and South Korea used their addresses at the General Assembly last week to raise alarm bells over the threat from North Korea.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe demanded that the world find a new way to confront Pyongyang after a decade of UN sanctions failed to change its behaviour.

“The threat to the internatio­nal community has become increasing­ly grave and all the more realistic,” he said Wednesday.

“It demands a new means of addressing it, altogether different from what we applied until yesterday.”

South Korea’s Foreign Minister Yung Byung-se suggested that the North could be stripped of its status as a member of the United Nations for refusing to accept the Security Council’s decisions.

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