Los Angeles Times

U.N. sanctions North Korea

The Security Council imposes new sanctions despite the threat of a nuclear strike.

- By Paul Richter paul.richter@latimes.com

Security Council’s action comes even as Pyongyang threatens a “preemptive nuclear attack.”

WASHINGTON — The United Nations Security Council approved new sanctions on North Korea for its Feb. 12 nuclear test, ignoring Pyongyang’s first-ever threat to launch a preemptive nuclear strike on the United States and South Korea.

By a 15-0 vote Thursday, the council approved sanctions on North Korean banking, travel by senior officials and the trade the country conducts in banned nuclear and missile technologi­es. It was the fourth round of sanctions approved by the body.

Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, predicted the sanctions “will bite, and bite hard.”

The key to their effectiven­ess, analysts said, is whether China, North Korea’s longtime protector and source of food and energy, clamps down strongly to halt the flow of banned equipment and to prevent the illicit financial transactio­ns that support the nuclear and missile programs.

China has shown increasing frustratio­n with its defiant neighbor and accepted most of what the United States sought in a threeweek negotiatio­n over the proposed resolution, diplomats said. Yet China wants to send the impoverish­ed regime a signal without risking its collapse, which China fears could send waves of refugees across its border and potentiall­y put a unified U.S.-backed Korea on its doorstep.

Chinese enforcemen­t of previous sanctions has been spotty.

Li Baodong, China’s ambassador to the United Nations, described the resolution to reporters as a “very important step” that ref lected “the determinat­ion of the internatio­nal community.”

The sanctions give other countries new authority to inspect North Korean cargo, and expand a list of goods that the regime in Pyongyang is prohibited from importing. They further limit North Korea’s dealings with foreign banks and impose new rules on the conduct of North Korean diplomats.

Diplomats said the punishment­s pose a new challenge for North Korea’s young leader, Kim Jong Un. But they didn’t predict that the sanctions would be more effective than their predecesso­rs in halting the Stalinist regime’s weapons programs.

As the hour of the vote approached, North Korea stepped up its angry rhetoric. It declared that because the United States and South Korea were conducting military exercises, which it viewed as the prelude to a nuclear attack on the North, Pyongyang would “exercise the right to a preemptive nuclear attack to destroy the stronghold­s of the aggressors and to defend the supreme interests of the country,” according to the official Korean Central News Agency.

The agency said Pyongyang was no longer observing the 1953 armistice that ended the Korean war, and was free to attack its enemies at any time.

U.S. and South Korean officials have largely discounted North Korea’s lan- guage about nuclear weapons, which they believe is aimed in large part at strengthen­ing loyalty for Kim. They doubt that the North will ignite a nuclear war that would lead to its obliterati­on, but they fear that it could launch a smallersca­le convention­al attack at its border with South Korea, as it has done repeatedly.

The State Department, while describing North Korea’s rhetoric as “not new,” sought to reassure the public.

“The United States is fully capable of defending against a [North Korean] ballistic missile attack,” said spokeswoma­n Victoria Nuland. She said the United States continues to upgrade its missile defenses and is “firmly committed” to the defense of Japan and South Korea.

 ?? Jon Chol Jin
Associated Press ?? NORTH KOREANS rally in Pyongyang this week in support of the government. The billboard in the back depicts a bayonet pointing at U.S. troops and reads, “If you dare invade, only death will be waiting for you!”
Jon Chol Jin Associated Press NORTH KOREANS rally in Pyongyang this week in support of the government. The billboard in the back depicts a bayonet pointing at U.S. troops and reads, “If you dare invade, only death will be waiting for you!”
 ?? Bebeto Matthews
Associated Press ?? THE U.N. Security Council voted 15 to 0 to impose new sanctions on trade, travel and banking. Whether the measures will work may depend on China.
Bebeto Matthews Associated Press THE U.N. Security Council voted 15 to 0 to impose new sanctions on trade, travel and banking. Whether the measures will work may depend on China.

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