Imperial Valley Press

North Korea ends party meeting with calls for nuclear might

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un vowed all-out efforts to bolster his country’s nuclear deterrent during a major ruling party meeting where he earlier laid out plans to work toward salvaging the broken economy.

Separately, Kim’s powerful sister criticized South Korea’s military for saying it had seen an apparent military parade taking place in Pyongyang. Kim Yo Jong, who was described last year as being in charge of inter-Korean relations, said in a statement Wednesday that such close tracking proved Seoul’s “hostile approach” toward its rival.

The eight-day Workers’ Party congress that ended Tuesday came as Kim Jong Un faces what appears to be the toughest moment of his nine-year rule.

Pandemic-related border closures and floods and typhoons that wiped out summer crops further shocked an economy already devastated by mismanagem­ent and U.S.-led sanctions over his nuclear weapons program.

“While further strengthen­ing our nuclear war deterrent, we need to invest every effort to build the strongest military capabiliti­es,” Kim said during his closing remarks at the congress, which were published by Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency.

North Korean state television later showed Kim, wearing horn-rimmed glasses and a black Mao suit, delivering the speech to thousands of party elites, who responded with thunderous applause.

“We need to speed up our push to make our military more elite and stronger so that it could cope with any kind of threat or unexpected situations,” he said. “Enemy forces will strengthen their manic efforts to block our path and the world will be watching how our party’s political declaratio­n and goals of struggle materializ­e in reality.”

Kim also called for reassertin­g greater state control over the economy, boosting agricultur­al production and prioritizi­ng the developmen­t of chemicals and metal industries in a five-year plan. Outside experts say such sectors would be crucial to North Korean hopes to revitalize indus

trial production that has been decimated by sanctions and halted imports of factory materials amid the pandemic.

South Korean intelligen­ce officials and analysts have said there are signs that the North is taking dramatic steps to strengthen government control over markets, including ending the use of U.S. dollars and other foreign currencies.

Such measures, which are apparently aimed at forcing people to exchange their foreign currency savings for the North Korean won, demonstrat­e the government’s sense of urgency over its depleting foreign currency reserves, said Lim Soo-ho, an analyst at a think tank run by Seoul’s spy agency.

Foreign currencies have been broadly used in both trade and private market transactio­ns in North Korea since 2009 when a botched currency revaluatio­n under the rule of Kim’s father sparked hyperinfla­tion and public unrest.

The KCNA said the North will convene its rubber-stamp parliament on Sunday to adopt the decisions make by the congress into law.

The economic setbacks have left Kim with nothing to show for his high-stakes summitry with President Donald Trump. Their diplomacy deteriorat­ed after the collapse of their talks in Vietnam in February 2019, when the Americans rejected North Korea’s demand for major sanctions relief in exchange for a partial surrender of its nuclear capabiliti­es.

During the congress, Kim doubled down on his ambitions to expand the North’s military capabiliti­es and announced plans to develop more sophistica­ted nuclear assets, including longer-range missiles that could potentiall­y target the American homeland, spy satellites, new tactical nuclear weapons and nuclear-powered submarines.

In comments that were apparently aimed at pressuring the incoming Biden administra­tion, Kim labeled the United States as the North’s “principal enemy” and said the fate of bilateral relations would depend on whether Washington discards what Pyongyang perceives as hostile policies.

 ?? Tral News Agency/Korea News Service via AP
Korean Cen- ?? In this photo provided by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un acknowledg­es to the applauds after he made his closing remarks at a ruling party congress in Pyongyang, North Korea on Tuesday.
Tral News Agency/Korea News Service via AP Korean Cen- In this photo provided by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un acknowledg­es to the applauds after he made his closing remarks at a ruling party congress in Pyongyang, North Korea on Tuesday.

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