The Columbus Dispatch

US admiral: Kim seeks to reunify Koreas

- By Richard Lardner

WASHINGTON — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s long-term goal is to reunify the divided Korean Peninsula under his totalitari­an government, the senior U.S. Navy officer overseeing military operations in the Pacific told lawmakers Wednesday.

Adm. Harry Harris Jr. said during testimony before the House Armed Services Committee there’s a prevailing view that Kim needs a nuclear arsenal to safeguard his regime. But Harris says Kim is after much more.

“I think we are selflimiti­ng if we view North Korea’s nuclear ambitions as solely a means to safeguard his regime,” said Harris, who leads U.S. Pacific Command. “I do think that he is after reunificat­ion under a single communist system. So he’s after what his grandfathe­r failed to do and his father failed to do and he’s on a path to achieve what he feels is his natural place.”

Kim’s father and grandfathe­r were the late North Korean rulers Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung.

Harris also said North Korea’s advancing nuclear weapon and ballistic missile programs put “him in a position to blackmail the South and other countries in the region and us.”

The testimony from Harris, an officer who’s been in uniform for nearly 40 years and speaks bluntly, came as athletes from North Korea are participat­ing in the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea. The games led to a remarkable moment of reconcilia­tion between the rivals but their decades-long animositie­s could easily erupt again after the Olympics.

Harris called North Korea’s Olympic delegation, which included Kim’s sister Kim Yo Jong, a “charm offensive.” He said it behooves the U.S. and South Korea to consider North Korea “for the regime it is and to deal with it on the basis of fact, not charm.”

Top U.S. intelligen­ce officials on Tuesday delivered their latest threat assessment, telling the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee that the risk of conflict with North Korea is higher today than at any time since the end of the Cold War. Their wide-ranging intelligen­ce report also said North Korea will likely conduct more missile tests this year and not negotiate away its nuclear capabiliti­es.

Vice President Mike Pence, who was in Pyeongchan­g for the start of the Olympics, said the U.S. is open for talks without preconditi­ons with North Korea, a subtle shift in White House policy.

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