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North Korea lashes out at US diplomats over sanctions

10 Aug 2018

North Korea has lashed out again at the US for not lifting sanctions against the country. The foreign ministry said it had made various goodwill gestures, and yet the US was still following an "outdated acting script" and jeopardising any moves towards denuclearisation. North Korea remains under a range of international and US sanctions over its nuclear programme and missile tests. The US wants full nuclear disarmament before sanctions can be lifted. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un agreed in June to work towards denuclearising the Korean peninsula. But the details of that process remain vague – North Korea did not commit to unilaterally giving up its nuclear weapons. Last week, a leaked UN report said the country had not stopped building weapons – which prompted the US to call on the international community to keep enforcing sanctions.   What does North Korea say? Its foreign ministry cited various conciliatory moves it says the country has made: halting missile tests, the return of the remains of US soldiers killed in the 1950-53 Korean War and the dismantling of a nuclear site. It said the US was clinging to an old script that "all previous administrations have all tried and failed". It also accused US officials of "going against the intention of President Trump" by "making baseless allegations" and "desperate attempts at intensifying the international sanctions and pressure". It said "expecting any result, while insulting the dialogue partner" was a "foolish act that amounts to waiting to see a boiled egg hatch out". Earlier this week, North Korea's foreign minister called US actions "alarming". And last month, North Korea accused the US of using "gangster-like" tactics in the negotiations. Pyongyang's Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho is currently on a visit to Iran where President Hassan Rouhani warned the US could not be trusted after Tehran's experience of having the Trump administration tear up an Obama-era deal to ease sanctions. According to Iranian media, Mr Ri said his country would seek to retain its nuclear know-how for when the US would revert to a more aggressive position against Pyongyang. "Since we know that the US will never give up its hostile policy toward us, we will hold onto our nuclear knowledge," he was quoted as saying by local media.   What does the US say? Top diplomats from the US have strongly criticised the North's commitment to denuclearisation. National security adviser John Bolton earlier this week said North Korea had not begun the progress, while the US envoy to the UN, Nikki Haley, said Washington was "not willing to wait for too long" for the North. Last week, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said it was important to maintain "diplomatic and economic pressure" on North Korea.   What next? Andray Abrahamian, a North Korean specialist at Australia's Griffith University, said neither the US or North Korea seemed clear on what was the fair way to proceed. "And nor is either side able yet to articulate what the end state of a peace regime will look like either," he added. "I think both are afraid that articulating it is a set up for a loss. We need some kind of simultaneous concession on both sides to get this process moving again." (Courtesy BBC)


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