Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

N. Korea offended by Biden remarks

U.S. insists policy seeking solutions

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Sunday warned the United States will face “a very grave situation” because President Joe Biden “made a big blunder” in his recent speech by calling the North a security threat and revealing his intent to maintain a hostile policy against it.

The statement was one of three that the North released Sunday directed at the United States and its ally South Korea. They included warnings that the North might respond to the Biden administra­tion’s recent statements about the country with unspecifie­d “correspond­ing measures.”

Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, said Sunday that U.S. policy is “not aimed at hostility, it’s aimed at solutions” and at “ultimately achieving the complete denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.”

“And we’re prepared to engage in diplomacy towards that ultimate objective, but work on practical measures that can help us make progress along the way towards that goal,” Sullivan said on ABC’s “This Week.”

Last week, Biden, in his first address to Congress, called North Korea’s and Iran’s nuclear programs “serious threats” to American and world security and said he’ll work with allies to address those problems through diplomacy and stern deterrence.

The administra­tion, which has been conducting a North Korea policy review, recently indicated that it would pursue a strategy somewhere between former President Donald Trump’s direct outreach to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, in which Trump strove for a single, sweeping deal, and the “strategic

patience” approach of former President Barack Obama, which sought to compel the North to negotiate through sanctions and other forms of pressure.

Both approaches failed , and North Korea has kept expanding its arsenal.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday that the administra­tion “will not focus on achieving a grand bargain, nor will it rely on strategic patience.” She said it would seek “a calibrated, practical approach that is open to and will explore diplomacy” with North Korea and would try to “make practical progress that increases the security” of the United States and its allies.

But the scale of the task facing the administra­tion was underlined by the angry statements from Pyongyang on Sunday. Kwon Jong Gun, a senior North Korean Foreign Ministry official, said Biden’s comments revealed that little would change from the regime’s point of view.

“His statement clearly reflects his intent to keep enforcing the hostile policy toward the DPRK as it had been done by the U.S. for over half a century,” Kwon said. DPRK stands for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the North’s official name.

“It is certain that the U.S. chief executive made a big blunder in the light of the present-day viewpoint,” Kwon said. “Now that the keynote of the U.S. new DPRK policy has become clear, we will be compelled to press for correspond­ing measures, and with time the U.S. will find itself in a very grave situation.”

Kwon didn’t specify what steps North Korea would take, and his statement could be seen as an effort to apply pressure on the Biden administra­tion as it’s shaping up its policy.

Although Kwon’s comments came in response to Biden’s speech to Congress rather than directly to the policy review, they underscore the breakdown in communicat­ion between the two countries since the collapse of a summit between Trump and Kim in 2019 that ended with no agreement on dismantlin­g the North’s nuclear weapons facilities or easing U.S.-led sanctions.

“If Pyongyang agrees to working-level talks, the starting point of negotiatio­ns would be a freeze of North Korean testing and developmen­t of nuclear capabiliti­es and delivery systems,” said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor of internatio­nal studies at Ewha University in Seoul. “If, on the other hand, Kim shuns diplomacy and opts for provocativ­e tests, Washington will likely expand sanctions enforcemen­t and military exercises with allies.”

In January, Kim threatened to enlarge his nuclear arsenal and build more high-tech weapons targeting the U.S. mainland, saying the fate of bilateral ties would depend on whether it abandons its hostile policy. In March, he conducted short-range ballistic missile tests for the first time in a year, though he still maintains a moratorium on bigger weapons launches.

“North Korea wants the U.S. to lift sanctions and recognize it as a nuclear power. The Biden policy review is charting a different course,” Easley said. “The U.S. goal of ‘complete denucleari­zation’ means not accepting North Korea as a nuclear weapons state and that sanctions relief will be conditione­d on progress toward denucleari­zation.”

HUMAN RIGHTS DEBATED

In a separate statement Sunday, the North’s Foreign Ministry accused the Biden administra­tion of using criticism of the North’s human rights record as “a political weapon for overturnin­g our social system.”

“We will be forced to take correspond­ing measures,” an unidentifi­ed spokesman for the ministry was quoted as saying. “We have already made it clear that we will counter in the strongest terms whoever encroaches upon the dignity of our supreme leadership, which is more valuable than our lives.”

That was in response to a statement last week by Ned Price, the State Department spokesman, who called North Korea “one of the most repressive and totalitari­an states in the world.” Price cited “shoot-to-kill orders at the North Korea-China border” that U.S. officials say the North has imposed since the emergence of covid-19.

Also Sunday, Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, denounced South Korea for failing to stop a group of activists from using balloons to send propaganda leaflets across the countries’ border into the North.

The group’s leader said Friday he sent 500,000 leaflets by air last week, in defiance of a new, contentiou­s South Korean law that criminaliz­es such action. He accused the South Korean government of “gagging” the defectors and denying North Koreans the right to know how their leaders were seen by the outside world.

Such launches, a tactic often used by defectors from North Korea campaignin­g against the Kim regime, were banned by South Korea in March on the grounds that they needlessly provoked Pyongyang and endangered South Koreans living near the border. The North cited the propaganda launches last year when it blew up an office building on its soil where officials from the two Koreas had worked together.

Kim Yo Jong, who serves as her brother’s spokeswoma­n on inter-Korean issues, called the defectors “human wastes” in her statement Sunday, characteri­zing the launch as “a serious provocatio­n” and warning that the North would “look into correspond­ing action.”

She accused the South Korean government of “winking at” the leaflets. Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry responded later Sunday saying it opposes any act that creates tensions on the Korean Peninsula, and it will strive to achieve better ties with North Korea.

North and South Korea remain in a technical state of war because the fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice and not a peace treaty.

Easley said the North Korean statements by Kwon and Kim Yo Jong show that “Pyongyang is trying to drive a wedge between South Korea and the United States” ahead of the May 21 summit between Biden and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States