PYONGYANG,
North Korea — North Korea’s top diplomat for U.S. affairs told The Associated
Press on Thursday that Washington “crossed the red line” and effectively
declared war by putting leader Kim
Jong Un on its list of
sanctioned individuals, and said a vicious showdown could erupt if the U.S. andSouth
Korea hold annual war
games as planned next month.
Han Song Ryol, director-general of the U.S. affairs department
at the North’s Foreign Ministry, said in an interview that recent U.S. actions
have put the situation on the Korean Peninsula on a war footing.
The United States and South Korea regularly conduct joint
military exercises south of the Demilitarized Zone, and Pyongyang typically responds to them
with tough talk and threats of retaliation.
Han said North Korea believes the nature of the maneuvers has
become openly aggressive because they reportedly now include training designed
to prepare troops for the invasion of the North’s capital and “decapitation
strikes” aimed at killing its top leadership.
Han says designating Kim himself for sanctions was the final
straw.
“The Obama
administration went so
far to have the impudence to challenge the supreme dignity of the DPRK in order
to get rid of its unfavorable position during the political and military
showdown with the DPRK,” Han said, using the acronym for North Korea’s official
name, the Democratic People’s
Republic of Korea .
“The United States has crossed the red line in our showdown,” he
said. “We regard this thrice-cursed crime as a declaration of war.”
Although North Korea had already been heavily sanctioned
internationally for its nuclear weapons and long-range missile development
programs, Washington’s announcement on July 6 was the first time Kim Jong Un
has been personally sanctioned.
Less than a week later, Pyongyang cut off its final official
means of communications with Washington — known as the New York channel. Han
said Pyongyang has made it clear that everything between the two must now be
dealt with under “war law.”
U.S. officials could not be immediately reached for comment, and
South Korea’s unification, defense and foreign ministries did not immediately
comment.
Kim and 10 others were put on the list of sanctioned individuals
in connection with alleged human rights abuses, documented by the United
Nations Human Rights Commission, that include a network of political prisons
and harsh treatment of any kind of political dissent in the authoritarian
state. U.S.
State Department officials
said the sanctions were intended in part to highlight those responsible for the
abuses and to pressure lower-ranking officials to think twice before carrying
them out.
Pyongyang denies abuse claims and says the U.N. report was based
on fabrications gleaned from disgruntled defectors. Pointing to such things as
police shootings of black Americans and poverty in even the richest
democracies, it says the West has no moral high ground from which to criticize
the North’s domestic political situation. It also says U.S. allies with
questionable human-rights records receive less criticism.
Han took strong issue with the claim that it not the U.S. but
Pyongyang’s continued development of nuclear weapons and missiles that is
provoking tensions.
“Day by day, the U.S. military blackmail against the DPRK and
the isolation and pressure is becoming more open,” Han said. “It is not us, it
is the United States that first developed nuclear weapons, who first deployed
them and who first used them against humankind. And on the issue of missiles
and rockets, which are to deliver nuclear warheads and conventional weapons
warheads, it is none other than the United States who first developed it and
who first used it.”
He noted that U.S.-South Korea military exercises conducted this
spring were unprecedented in scale, and that the U.S. has deployed the USS
Mississippi and USS Ohio nuclear-powered submarines to South Korean ports,
deployed the B-52 strategic bomber around South Korea and is planning to set up
the world’s most advanced missile defense system, known by its acronym THAAD,
in the South, a move that has also angered China.
Echoing earlier state-media
reports, Han ridiculed Mark
Lippert , the U.S. ambassador to South Korea, for a flight on a U.S.
Air Force F-16 based in South Korea that he said was an action “unfit for a
diplomat.”
“We
regard that as the act of a villain, who is a crazy person,” Han said of the
July 12 flight. “All these facts show that the United States is intentionally
aggravating the tensions in the Korean Peninsula.”
Han warned that Pyongyang is viewing next month’s planned
U.S.-South Korea exercises in this new context and will respond if they are
carried out as planned.
“Nobody can predict what kind of influence this kind of vicious
confrontation between the DPRK and the United States will have upon the
situation on the Korean Peninsula,” he said. “By doing these kinds of vicious
and hostile acts toward the DPRK, the U.S. has already declared war against the
DPRK. So it is our self-defensive right and justifiable action to respond in a
very hard way.
“We are all prepared for war, and we are all prepared for
peace,” he said. “If theUnited
States forces those
kinds of large-scale exercises in August, then the situation caused by that
will be the responsibility of the United States.”
Last year’s Ulchi Freedom Guardian exercises involved 30,000
American and 50,000 South Korean troops and followed a period of heightened
animosity between the rival Koreas sparked by land mine explosions that maimed
two South Korean soldiers. In the end, the exercises escalated tensions and
rhetoric, but concluded with no major incidents.
Han dismissed calls for Pyongyang to defuse tensions by agreeing
to abandon its nuclear program.
“In the view of cause and effect, it is the U.S. that provided
the cause of our possession of nuclear forces,” he said. “We never hide the
fact, and we are very proud of the fact, that we have very strong nuclear
deterrent forces not only to cope with the United States’ nuclear blackmail but
also to neutralize the nuclear blackmail of the United States.”
N. Korea: US Has Crossed Red Line, Relations on War Footing
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