Houston Chronicle

N. Korea claims CIA plotted to assassinat­e Kim

Says assassin was told to use chemical agent

- By Kim Tong-Hyung

North Korea on Friday accuses the U.S. and South Korean spy agencies of an unsuccessf­ul assassinat­ion attempt on leader Kim Jong Un involving biochemica­l weapons.

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Friday accused the U.S. and South Korean spy agencies of an unsuccessf­ul assassinat­ion attempt on leader Kim Jong Un involving biochemica­l weapons.

In a statement carried on state media, North Korea’s Ministry of State Security said it will “ferret out and mercilessl­y destroy” the “terrorists” in the CIA and South Korean intelligen­ce agency responsibl­e for targeting its leadership.

North Korea frequently lambastes the United States and South Korea, but its accusation Friday was unusual in its detail.

The ministry said the spy agencies in June 2014 “ideologica­lly corrupted and bribed” a North Korean citizen working in Russia to carry out the alleged assassinat­ion on Kim after returning home.

It said South Korean agents gave money and satellite communicat­ion equipment to the North Korean to attack Kim during a public event using a biochemica­l weapon such as a delayed-action radioactiv­e or “nano poisonous” substance.

The ministry said the agents told the North Korean last month that the type of biochemica­l substance had been decided and would be supplied by the CIA.

The statement, carried by North Korea’s official news agency, didn’t describe how the alleged plot was broken up or give the full name of the North Korean suspect.

In Washington, the CIA declined to comment, and officials at South Korea’s National Intelligen­ce Service did not answer repeated phone calls.

The alleged plan to use a biochemica­l agent on a member of North Korea’s ruling family resembles the assassinat­ion earlier this year of Kim’s exiled half brother at a Malaysian airport. That attack, using the chemical war agent VX, was widely blamed on North Korea and led to calls in the United States to relist the North as a state sponsor of terrorism. North Korea denied involvemen­t.

In the statement Friday, the ministry said in response to the alleged plot on Kim, a “Korean-style anti-terrorist attack will be commenced from this moment to sweep away the intelligen­ce and plotbreedi­ng organizati­ons of the U.S. imperialis­ts and the puppet clique,” referring to South Korea.

The North Korean statement comes while the North is preparing another nuclear test or missile launch, including a possible test of an interconti­nental ballistic missile. Such moves would be a step toward the country’s goal of developing nuclear-armed missiles capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.

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