Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

North Korea slams South, U.S. ties, fires more missiles

- KIM TONG-HYUNG Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Mari Yamaguchi of The Associated Press.

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea on Friday bluntly criticized South Korean President Moon Jae-in for continuing to hold military exercises with the U.S. and over his rosy comments on inter-Korean diplomacy, and said Pyongyang has no current plans to talk with Seoul.

The statement by an unidentifi­ed government spokesman came hours before South Korea’s military detected two projectile­s North Korea fired into the sea to extend a weapon display that’s apparently aimed at pressuring Washington and Seoul over their joint drills and slow nuclear negotiatio­ns.

South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said the projectile­s launched from the North’s eastern coast flew about 143 miles before landing in water between the Korean Peninsula and Japan. The U.S. and South Korean militaries were analyzing the launches but didn’t immediatel­y say whether the weapons were ballistic missiles or rocket artillery.

The North has ignored South Korean calls for dialogue recently and is seen as trying to force Seoul to make stronger efforts to coax major concession­s from Washington on its behalf.

Moon, in a televised speech on Thursday, said momentum for dialogue remains alive despite the series of “worrying actions taken by North Korea recently.” He called for Pyongyang to choose “economic prosperity over its nuclear program.”

The spokespers­on of the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunificat­ion of the Country said Moon’s comments would make a “boiled head of a cow [fall into] a side-splitting laughter.”

“A sure thing is that the [South] Korean chief executive is [such a] funny man as he just reads what was written by his juniors,” the statement said, while avoiding calling Moon by his name.

The statement also criticized South Korea’s recent acquisitio­n of advanced U.S.made fighter jets and said it would be “senseless” for Moon to believe that interKorea­n dialogue will automatica­lly begin after the end of the ongoing U.S.-South Korean drills.

“We have nothing to [talk about] any more with [South] Korean authoritie­s nor have any [plans] to sit with them again,” the statement said.

The North had recently said it would talk only with Washington and not Seoul, and that inter-Korean dialogue won’t resume unless the South offers a “plausible excuse” on why it keeps hosting military drills with the United States. Seoul’s Unificatio­n Ministry, which deals with inter-Korean affairs, criticized the North Korean statement, saying it wouldn’t help efforts to improve relations.

Pyongyang has also been demanding that Seoul turn away from Washington and restart inter-Korean economic projects held back by U.S.-led sanctions against the North.

The United States has so far rejected North Korea’s demands for sanctions relief in exchange for piecemeal deals toward partially surrenderi­ng its nuclear capabiliti­es and urged Pyongyang to commit to completely relinquish­ing its nuclear and missile programs.

Friday’s launches were North Korea’s sixth round of tests since late July, when it stepped up its weapon demonstrat­ions while expressing frustratio­n over stalemated nuclear negotiatio­ns with the United States as well as the U.S.-South Korean drills that the North sees as an invasion rehearsal.

South Korea’s presidenti­al office said national security adviser Chung Eui-yong presided over an emergency National Security Council meeting and Moon was briefed on the launches. The South’s presidenti­al Blue House called for the North to stop launches that risk raising military tension on the peninsula.

The weapons the North tested in recent weeks included a new rocket artillery system and what security analysts say are two new short-range mobile ballistic missile systems that would potentiall­y expand its ability to strike targets throughout South Korea, including U.S. bases there.

Japan’s Defense Ministry said the North Korean projectile­s did not reach the country’s territoria­l water or its exclusive economic zone.

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