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North Korea threats to 'reexamine' nuclear сapabilities

Published time: July 21, 2012 02:33
Edited time: July 22, 2012 03:21
A North Korean missile Taepodong class (AFP Photo / Pedro Ugarte)

Pyongyang has said it would “reexamine” its nuclear capabilities after perceiving a new, threatening agenda from its southern neighbor and United States.

­"The consistent hostile policy towards the DPRK pursued by the US is giving rise to the evil cycle of confrontation and tensions on the Korean Peninsula, making the prospect of denuclearizing the peninsula all the more gloomy," an unnamed Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

The comments come following the arrest of North Korean defector Jon Yong Chol, who is accused of returning to the country with orders from South Korean and US intelligence to blow up statues and monuments in order to create the appearance of internal unrest.

North Korean television broadcasted Chol’s testimony, where he outlined his alleged plans.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry, which handles relations with North Korea, confirmed Chol’s 2010 defection but has denounced the sabotage allegation as groundless, with one official calling it an "improbable plot," reports the Los Angeles Times.

North Korea has also accused Washington of backing the plot, thus violating a deal with Pyongyang to pull back on its atomic program.

"Without the US fundamental repeal of its hostile policy toward the DPRK first, it will be completely impossible to settle the issue of ensuring the lasting peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula."

In June, North Korea claimed that it had no plans to conduct a third nuclear test, after the UN Security Council tightened sanctions on Pyongyang after a failed rocket launch in April.

Previous atomic tests have been conducted in 2006 and 2009.

Military nuclear capability is not the only thing North Korea's young leader wants to reexamine.

This week, Kim Jong-un dismissed his military chief, apparently after he voiced his opposition to major economic reforms about to be initiated by the country's leader.

Vice Marshal Ri Yong-ho, a supporter of the military first policy, had been discharged for opposing plans to seize control of economic policy from the military, Reuters reports.

“The military plays a huge economic role in North Korea – they deal with harvesting the crops, they deal with working on roads. A lot of the employment in North Korea relates to militarism and the military, but it’s a change of attitude that is necessary, and perhaps what we’re beginning to see is that the North Koreans are beginning to understand that that change is necessary not only to engage more with the rest of the world, but to begin to move forward with their own aspirations to be a strong, independent country,” Eric Sirotkin, of the Campaign to End the Korean War, told RT.  

The planned reforms could be Pyongyang’s most significant move in decades to revive its economy. Previous attempts, like 2009's currency re-denomination, have not been welcomed by the public.

Comments (57)

tricky (unregistered) 22.07.2012 12:20

@JP Sanders
These illegal sanctions are in themself an act of war!  What you are suggesting is plane ridiculous.  All countries need to trade and build relationships and despite the west to impede this Iran has many willing partners in South America, BRICS (emerging powers by the way thich Iran is part of. 
And what poverty are you talking about?  Are you in denial or just lying?
Do you know Iran's rate of young scientific progress RANKS NUMBER ONE IN THE WORLD?  And just another fact to put you in your place- Iran is the 19th largest economy in the world. It is a unique position in the sense that the West are constantly trying to sabotage it. It has much to offer the world including its culture.

+11

Undo

@A.Smith (unregistered) 22.07.2012 12:03

A.Smith (unregistered) wrote in #6
With the Satanically evil Zionist infested USA Pentagon's Operation Anaconda...    

not sure who you are trying to convince in your comment. if you aim towards the Anti-Western - those are allready convinced to the max, and their hatered is so fierce that your comment won't have any impact on them at all. if it's aimed to convince pro-westerns - then i wouldn't start with insults and curses since i never got anyone convinced in my opinion by showing him how much i hate him.
i guess it maybe to blow out some steam. since there isn't much you can do to destroy the evil west, writing a comment may give you the illusion that you are actually somehow "contributing" to the west destruction. the other option is to provide some breakfest to the pack of hungry lions

0

Undo

Rrvvrvrcdcdvv (unregistered) 22.07.2012 07:34

Hey o fo git about it 

0

Undo

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