This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/26/world/asia/north-korea-turns-its-ire-on-south-korea.html
The article has changed 8 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 4 | Version 5 |
---|---|
North Korea Turns Its Combativeness Toward the South | North Korea Turns Its Combativeness Toward the South |
(about 1 hour later) | |
SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea threatened on Friday to take “physical countermeasures” against South Korea if it helps enforce tightened sanctions against the besieged North, calling the United Nations-endorsed penalties a “declaration of war” and warning of a prolonged chill in the relations between the two Koreas. | |
North Korea’s confrontational posture is likely to significantly limit room for the South’s incoming conservative president, Park Geun-hye, to make overtures for reconciliation with the North; like the departing President Lee Myung-bak and President Obama, Ms. Park considers the dismantling of the North’s nuclear program the premise in all of South Korea’s diplomacy toward the North. Since her December election, she has said she will not tolerate the North’s nuclear program and will deal sternly with North Korean provocations. | |
In a statement issued in the name of its Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland, which manages relations with South Korea, North Korea gave no hint of what those countermeasures might be. While its earlier pronouncements more often than not turned out to be bluster, North Korea does have a history of following up some with unexpected military attacks — most recently, its shelling of a border island in 2010 that left four South Koreans dead. It was also blamed for sinking a South Korean warship the same year, leaving 46 sailors dead. | In a statement issued in the name of its Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland, which manages relations with South Korea, North Korea gave no hint of what those countermeasures might be. While its earlier pronouncements more often than not turned out to be bluster, North Korea does have a history of following up some with unexpected military attacks — most recently, its shelling of a border island in 2010 that left four South Koreans dead. It was also blamed for sinking a South Korean warship the same year, leaving 46 sailors dead. |
Those two episodes brought the two Koreas closer than ever in recent decades to waging a full-scale war, dispelling Washington’s desire to engage North Korea in serious negotiation. While calling for a vigorous enforcement of United Nations sanctions, Glyn Davies, Washington’s special envoy on North Korea, also appealed to the North’s new leader, Kim Jong-un, not to miss the opportunities for a new beginning, stressing that Washington cannot improve ties with the North without progress in inter-Korean relations. | Those two episodes brought the two Koreas closer than ever in recent decades to waging a full-scale war, dispelling Washington’s desire to engage North Korea in serious negotiation. While calling for a vigorous enforcement of United Nations sanctions, Glyn Davies, Washington’s special envoy on North Korea, also appealed to the North’s new leader, Kim Jong-un, not to miss the opportunities for a new beginning, stressing that Washington cannot improve ties with the North without progress in inter-Korean relations. |
North Korea’s outburst against South Korea on Friday is the latest installment of a verbal barrage it started after the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday unanimously adopted a resolution condemning a Dec. 12 rocket launching by the North. The resolution called the launching a violation of earlier United Nations resolutions banning it from testing ballistic-missile technology, and called for tightening sanctions against the country. | |
“If the puppet group of traitors takes a direct part in the U.N. ‘sanctions,’ the D.P.R.K. will take strong physical countermeasures against it,” said North Korea, using the acronym of its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. “ ‘Sanctions’ mean a war and a declaration of war against us.” | |
The United Nations resolution was the fifth against the North for its rocket and nuclear programs since 1993. It calls for tightening existing sanctions, including expanding a travel ban on North Korean officials and freezing the assets of North Korean banks and other agencies accused of engaging in shipments and financing for the North’s missile and nuclear programs. It also broadened the means for United Nations member nations to intercept and confiscate cargo headed for the North. | |
Since the Security Council resolution, North Korea has said it will conduct a nuclear test and launch more long-range rockets and that there will be no more talks on the “denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula, a main goal of Washington’s thus far unsuccessful diplomacy on the Korean Peninsula for the last two decades. | |
With Friday’s threat against the South, North Korea, under the young Mr. Kim, appeared to be following a well-worn track established under his father, Kim Jong-il, before his death in December 2011: a cycle of North Korean provocation like a rocket launching, United Nations condemnation, then North Korean warnings of “physical countermeasures,” which were sometimes followed by provocative actions, like a nuclear test. | |
While this familiar cycle repeated itself in recent years, North Korea also steadily bolstered its nuclear and missile capabilities. The North Korean nuclear crisis began in the early 1990s with nothing but a tiny amount of fissile material North Korea was suspected of gleaning from its experimental research reactor. It has since accumulated enough plutonium for an estimated half dozen nuclear bombs, built a full-scale uranium-enrichment program, conducted two nuclear tests and made strides toward building intercontinental ballistic missiles that American officials fear could one day be tipped with nuclear warheads. | |
On Thursday, North Korea said it felt no need to hide its intention of building rockets and nuclear weapons, with the United States as a “target,” because Washington had intensified its “hostile” policy of “stifling” the already impoverished country. | |
On Friday, North Korea warned that the South should expect a continuing confrontation and even potential military clashes on the Korean Peninsula if the hard-line policy of the departing President Lee was inherited by Ms. Park. | On Friday, North Korea warned that the South should expect a continuing confrontation and even potential military clashes on the Korean Peninsula if the hard-line policy of the departing President Lee was inherited by Ms. Park. |
“Now that the South Korean puppet conservative group is more desperately kicking up a racket against the D.P.R.K. over its nuclear and missile issues with the U.S., there will be no more discussion on denuclearization between the North and the South in the future,” North Korea said. “As long as the South Korean puppet group of traitors persistently pursues a hostile policy toward the D.P.R.K., we will never negotiate with anyone.” | “Now that the South Korean puppet conservative group is more desperately kicking up a racket against the D.P.R.K. over its nuclear and missile issues with the U.S., there will be no more discussion on denuclearization between the North and the South in the future,” North Korea said. “As long as the South Korean puppet group of traitors persistently pursues a hostile policy toward the D.P.R.K., we will never negotiate with anyone.” |
In its statement, the North also said a 1992 joint declaration in which the two Koreas committed themselves not to pursue nuclear weapons was now completely invalid. | |
“President-elect Park makes it clear that North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and further provocations against the South will not be tolerated,” Rhee In-je, Ms. Park’s special envoy to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, told reporters on Thursday. “In particular, she strongly urges North Korea to refrain from further worsening the situation by conducting a third nuclear test.” | “President-elect Park makes it clear that North Korea’s nuclear ambitions and further provocations against the South will not be tolerated,” Rhee In-je, Ms. Park’s special envoy to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, told reporters on Thursday. “In particular, she strongly urges North Korea to refrain from further worsening the situation by conducting a third nuclear test.” |
Ms. Park’s office said on Friday that the president-elect would soon send a high-level delegation to Washington for a policy consultation at which North Korea was expected to be a focus of discussion. | |
The United Nations sanctions and the North’s angry reactions dissipated early hopes that changes of leadership in the North, the South and the United States would open the way for easing tensions. But some analysts said North Korea was just escalating tensions ahead of dialogue to increase its leverage. | |
North Korea, which has lived through American-led trade embargoes throughout its existence, considers itself a small yet proud nation struggling for independence in the face of an “imperialist” plot to erase it from the earth. It has typically called any new round of American-inspired sanctions a declaration of war. | North Korea, which has lived through American-led trade embargoes throughout its existence, considers itself a small yet proud nation struggling for independence in the face of an “imperialist” plot to erase it from the earth. It has typically called any new round of American-inspired sanctions a declaration of war. |