Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

U.S. clashes with North Korea over failed launch

Attempt violates U.N. resolution, allies argue

- By Edith M. Lederer

The United States and its allies clashed Friday with North Korea, Russia and China over Pyongyang’s failed attempts to launch a spy satellite and who is responsibl­e for escalating tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

The open Security Council meeting called by the U.S., Albania, Ecuador, France, Japan and Malta to condemn the attempted launch, which used banned ballistic missile technology, was attended by North Korea’s United Nations ambassador for just the second time since 2017.

Ambassador Kim Song, who also addressed the council in July, told members the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea — the country’s official name — has “an independen­t and legitimate right” as a sovereign country to launch a satellite for “self-defense to deter the ever-increasing hostile military acts of the United States and its followers.”

The North’s space agency said Thursday its reconnaiss­ance satellite, Malligyong-1, failed for a second time to go into orbit, blaming an error in its third-stage flight. Pyongyang said it will make a third attempt in October to achieve a key military goal of its leader, Kim Jong Un.

U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-greenfield said the DPRK had again defied Security Council resolution­s by pursuing its unlawful ballistic missile program. She said 13 of the 15 Security Council members oppose the DPRK’S unlawful actions and have called for an end to the country’s pursuit of nuclear weapons and its tests — and for unity of the council.

Song said the DPRK has never recognized Security Council resolution­s, which he claimed infringe on “the rights of a sovereign state and will never be bound by them in the future.”

He accused the United States and South Korea’s “military gangsters” of “turning the Korean Peninsula into a potential area of an immense thermal nuclear war” while clamoring for regime change in the DPRK and waging large-scale joint military exercises that he said feature “nuclear preemptive strikes on our state as a fait accompli.”

Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia called the council meeting “a cynical, hypocritic­al attempt by the U.S. and its allies to step up pressure on Pyongyang and to detract attention from the reckless escalatory actions of Washington and its allies in the region, who represent the real sources of threats to internatio­nal peace and security.”

He called the expansion of U.s.led military exercises “blatantly provocativ­e,” saying they further complicate prospects for starting a dialogue, which is necessary to strengthen regional security.

China’s deputy U.N. ambassador Geng Shuang accused the United States of “a long-standing hostile policy towards the DPRK,” telling the council that Washington’s continuous pressure, including sending a nuclear-armed submarine to the peninsula in July, makes the North feel “increasing­ly insecure.”

He said the Security Council should not intensify tension but take practical actions to respond to the DPRK’S legitimate concerns and create conditions to relaunch talks.

Thomas-greenfield, the U.S. ambassador, rejected “the disingenuo­us claims by Russia and China that the U.S. is acting in a hostile manner,” calling the military exercises routine, lawful and defensive.

Thomas-greenfield also reiterated the U.S. commitment to diplomacy, saying that the Biden administra­tion publicly and privately has repeatedly urged the DPRK to engage in dialogue without preconditi­ons.

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Linda Thomasgree­nfield

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