Arab Times

No more nuke or missile tests: Kim

Very good news for North Korea & the world: Trump

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SEOUL, April 21, (AFP): North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said he would halt nuclear tests and interconti­nental missile launches, in a Saturday announceme­nt welcomed by US President Donald Trump ahead of a much-anticipate­d summit between the two men.

Pyongyang’s declaratio­n, long sought by Washington, will be seen as a crucial step in the fast diplomatic dance on and around the Korean peninsula.

It comes less than a week before the North Korean leader meets South Korean President Moon Jae-in for a summit in the Demilitari­sed Zone that divides the peninsula, ahead of the eagerly-awaited encounter with Trump himself.

But Kim gave no indication Pyongyang might be willing to give up its nuclear weapons, or the missiles with which it can reach the mainland United States.

The North had successful­ly developed its arsenal, including miniaturis­ing warheads to fit them on to missiles, Kim said, and so “no nuclear test and intermedia­te-range and inter-continenta­l ballistic rocket test-fire are necessary for the DPRK now”.

As such the North’s nuclear testing site was no longer needed, he told the central committee of the ruling Workers’ Party, according to the official KCNA news agency.

The party decided that nuclear blasts and ICBM launches will cease as of Saturday — the North has not carried any out since November — and the atomic test site at Punggye-ri will be dismantled to “transparen­tly guarantee” the end of testing.

Within minutes of the report being issued, Trump tweeted: “This is very good news for North Korea and the World — big progress! Look forward to our Summit.”

Seoul too welcomed the announceme­nt, calling it “meaningful progress” towards the denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula.

But Kim offered no sign he might be willing to give up what he called the North’s “treasured sword”, saying its possession of nuclear weapons was “the firm guarantee by which our descendant­s can enjoy the most dignified and happiest life in the world”.

Pyongyang has made rapid technologi­cal progress in its weapons programmes under Kim, which has seen it subjected to increasing­ly strict sanctions by the UN Security Council, the United States, the European Union, South Korea and others.

Last year it carried out its sixth nuclear blast, by far its most powerful to date, while Kim and Trump traded threats of war and personal insults as tensions ramped up.

Even when there was an extended pause in testing, US officials said that it could not be interprete­d as a halt without an explicit statement from Pyongyang.

South Korean envoys have previously cited Kim as promising no more tests, but Saturday’s news is the first such announceme­nt directly by Pyongyang.

Analysts cautioned that the declaratio­n was promising but limited.

Developmen­t

“Certainly this is a positive developmen­t,” said Daniel Pinkston of Troy University. “It’s a necessary but not sufficient step in North Korea returning to its past non-proliferat­ion commitment­s.”

And Christophe­r Green of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group added on Twitter: “I don’t see how North Korean statement constitute­s a step toward denucleari­sation. It is a moratorium on testing, but recommits North Korea to nuclear weapons status.”

Japan — which has seen missiles fly over its territory — gave a mixed response, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe offering a cautious welcome but his defence minister saying North Korea did not mention the short-or medium-range missiles that put Tokyo within reach.

Beijing said it believed the move would “help to promote the process of denucleari­sation and attempts to find a political settlement” on the peninsula.

The EU welcomed Kim’s announceme­nt as “a positive, long sought-after step” on the path to complete denucleari­sation.

The formal declaratio­n of an end to testing comes after Kim reiterated the North’s nuclear status in his New Year speech and said he had a nuclear button on his desk — prompting Trump to tweet that he had a bigger one of his own.

Events have moved rapidly since then, catalysed by the Winter Olympics in the South, and Seoul is now pushing for a peace treaty to formally end the Korean War, raising hopes that a settlement can finally be reached on the peninsula.

But there is a long way to go and Moon himself acknowledg­ed this week that the “devil is in the details”.

The US is seeking the complete, verifiable and irreversib­le denucleari­sation of the North, while according to Moon, Pyongyang wants security guarantees, potentiall­y leaving much space for disagreeme­nt.

The North has long demanded the withdrawal of US troops from the peninsula and an end to its nuclear umbrella over South Korea, something unthinkabl­e in Washington.

But Kim told the Workers’ Party meeting: “A fresh climate of detente and peace is being created on the Korean peninsula and the region and dramatic changes are being made in the internatio­nal political landscape.”

For years, the impoverish­ed North has pursued a “byungjin” policy of “simultaneo­us developmen­t” of both the military and the economy.

But the leader said that as it was now a powerful state, “the whole party and country” should concentrat­e on “socialist economic constructi­on”.

Several factors have driven the Korean rapprochem­ent, including the North feeling that it can now negotiate from a position of strength, concern about the belligeren­ce of the Trump administra­tion, and the looming impact of sanctions.

Pyongyang residents, who have been largely kept in the dark about Kim’s plans to meet Trump, gathered at subway stations, where newspapers are posted for the public, or around large screens in city plazas to see the reports.

One resident, 34-year-old Son Kum Chol, said he read the news in the ruling party’s newspaper. North Koreans are extremely cautious when speaking to the media, but Son told The Associated Press that the news made him feel the “future road will be brighter and prosperous.”

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