Chattanooga Times Free Press

NKorea: Sanctions by U.N. an act of war

- BY RUSSELL GOLDMAN NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

North Korea on Sunday called the latest round of punishing United Nations sanctions an “act of war,” and reminded the United States that the North’s rapid developmen­t of missiles and atomic bombs meant it posed a “substantia­l nuclear threat to the U.S. mainland.”

In a statement released by the state-controlled Korean Central News Agency, North Korea said the sanctions approved unanimousl­y on Friday by the U.N. Security Council were tantamount to a blockade, and it threatened to retaliate against the United States and the council’s 14 other member nations.

“We will further consolidat­e our self-defensive nuclear deterrence aimed at fundamenta­lly eradicatin­g the U.S. nuclear threats, blackmail and hostile moves by establishi­ng the practical balance of force with the U.S.,” the Foreign Ministry statement read.

The sanctions, proposed by the United States and adopted by a vote of 15 to 0, were the third imposed this year in a continuing effort to get the North to halt its weapons program and return to the negotiatin­g table.

Under the new sanctions, fuel supplies will be drasticall­y cut, and roughly 100,000 North Koreans working in other countries will be expelled within two years. The sanctions are intended to hurt North Korea in two vital ways: Cutting refined petroleum imports by 89 percent would exacerbate the country’s fuel crisis, and expelling foreign guest workers would substantia­lly reduce remittance­s, an important source of hard currency.

“We define this ‘sanctions resolution’ rigged up by the U.S. and its followers as a grave infringeme­nt upon the sovereignt­y of our republic, as an act of war violating peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula and the region, and categorica­lly reject the ‘resolution,’” the North said in its statement.

The North vowed that each country that voted in favor of the resolution would be subject to retaliatio­n. Presumably, that threat extends to Russia and China.

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