Yuma Sun

North Korea says it carried out ‘very important test’

Result will have an important effect on changing the country’s strategic position, news agency says

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SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Sunday it carried out a “very important test” at its long-range rocket launch site that will have a key effect on the country’s strategic position.

The Korean Central News Agency said the test was conducted at the Sohae Satellite Launching Ground on Saturday afternoon. It said that the result of the test was reported to the Central Committee of the ruling Workers’ Party.

The test results will have “an important effect on changing the strategic position of (North Korea) once again in the near future,” the agency reported.

The report didn’t say what the test was about. But media reports say a new satellite image indicated North Korea may be preparing to resume testing engines used to power satellite launchers at the site.

The reported test came as North Korea is stepping up pressure on the U.S. to make concession­s in stalled nuclear talks.

The U.N. bans North Korea from launching satellites because it is considered a test of long-range missile technology.

After repeated failures, North Korea successful­ly put a satellite into orbit for the first time in 2012 in a launch from the same site. North Korea had another successful satellite launch in 2016.

At the United Nations, a statement released by North Korea’s U.N. ambassador, Kim Song, said that denucleari­zation had “already gone out of the negotiatio­n table.” It said North Korea does not need to have lengthy talks with the United States as the end-of-year deadline set by its leader Kim Jong Un for substantia­l U.S. concession­s in nuclear diplomacy looms.

The statement accused the Trump administra­tion of persistent­ly pursuing a “hostile policy” toward the country “in its attempt to stifle it.” The ambassador also said Washington’s claims it is engaged in a “sustained and substantia­l dialogue” with Pyongyang solely for “its domestic political agenda.”

“We do not need to have lengthy talks with the U.S. now and the denucleari­zation is already gone out of the negotiatio­n table,” he said.

Song’s statement was a response to Wednesday’s condemnati­on by six European countries of North Korea’s 13 ballistic missile launches since May. He accused the Europeans — France, Germany, Britain, Belgium, Poland and Estonia — of playing “the role of pet dog of the United States in recent months.” He called their statement “yet another serious provocatio­n” against North Korea’s “righteous measures of strengthen­ing national defense capabiliti­es.”

“We regard their behavior as nothing more than a despicable act of intentiona­lly flattering the United States,” Song said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JUNE 30 FILE PHOTO, PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the North Korean side of the border at the village of Panmunjom in Demilitari­zed Zone. North Korea threatened Thursday to resume insults of Trump and consider him a “dotard” if he keeps using provocativ­e language.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JUNE 30 FILE PHOTO, PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at the North Korean side of the border at the village of Panmunjom in Demilitari­zed Zone. North Korea threatened Thursday to resume insults of Trump and consider him a “dotard” if he keeps using provocativ­e language.

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