Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

US talks options for monitoring N. Korea

- KIM TONG-HYUNG

SEOUL, South Korea — The United States and its allies are discussing options “both inside and outside the U.N. system” to create a new mechanism for monitoring North Korea over its nuclear weapons program, the American ambassador to the United Nations said Wednesday.

Russia last month vetoed a U.N. resolution in a move that effectivel­y abolished monitoring by U.N. experts of Security Council sanctions against North Korea, which prompted Western accusation­s that Moscow was acting to shield its arms purchases from North Korea to fuel its war in Ukraine.

“I look forward to engaging with both the Republic of Korea and Japan, but like-minded (countries) as well, on trying to develop options both inside the U.N. as well as outside the U.N. The point here is that we cannot allow the work that the panel of experts were doing to lapse,” U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told a news conference in Seoul, using the formal name for South Korea.

Thomas-Greenfield didn’t provide specific details about U.S. discussion­s with allies and other partners, including whether an alternativ­e monitoring regime would more likely be establishe­d through the U.N. General Assembly or with an independen­t entity outside of the U.N.

Thomas-Greenfield met with South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Tae-yul on Monday and they discussed unspecifie­d “next steps to ensure a continuati­on of independen­t and accurate reporting” of North Korea’s illicit weapons developmen­t activities, according to her office.

Thomas-Greenfield said it was clear that Russia and China, which abstained from voting on the U.N. resolution vetoed by Moscow, will continue to try to block internatio­nal efforts to maintain monitoring of U.N. sanctions against North Korea. She criticized Russia for violating those sanctions with its alleged arms purchases from North Korea, and China for protecting the North from being held accountabl­e.

Moscow and Beijing have thwarted U.S.-led efforts to tighten U.N. sanctions on North Korea over its ramped-up ballistic missile testing since 2022, underscori­ng a divide between permanent Security Council members that deepened over Russia’s war on Ukraine.

“I don’t expect that they will cooperate or agree with any efforts that we make to find another path, but that is not going to stop us from finding that path moving forward,” Thomas-Greenfield said.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula are at their highest point in years, as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has accelerate­d his weapons demonstrat­ions and issued provocativ­e threats of nuclear conflict against rivals.

In a telephone conversati­on on Wednesday, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida agreed to further strengthen three-way cooperatio­n with Washington to counter North Korean threats and other regional challenges amid “deepening uncertaint­ies in the internatio­nal situation,” Yoon’s office said.

The Security Council imposed sanctions after North Korea’s first nuclear test explosion in 2006 and tightened them over the years in a total of 10 resolution­s seeking — so far unsuccessf­ully — to cut funds and curb its nuclear and missile programs. The last sanctions resolution was adopted by the council in December 2017.

The Security Council establishe­d a committee to monitor sanctions, and the mandate for its panel of experts to investigat­e violations had been renewed for 14 years until last month.

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