US actions threaten inter-Korean relations, says Pyongyang
BY Agencies2 Feb 2018 5:54 PM GMT
Agencies2 Feb 2018 5:54 PM GMT
United Nations: North Korea's foreign minister is warning the United States that its deployment of nuclear- powered aircraft carriers and planned military exercises immediately after the Winter Olympics threaten improved relations between the two Koreas.
Ri Yong Ho urged the United Nations not to remain silent about what he called "the US dangerous game of aggravating (the) situation in and around the Korean peninsula and driving the whole world into a possible disaster of nuclear war."
In a letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres circulated today, he urged the U.N. chief to exert efforts to halt the US deployment of equipment and the upcoming military maneuvers.
Ri warned that the US military actions are aimed "to provoke a nuclear war, which will undermine the improvement of inter-Korean relations and the easing of tensions."
The North Korean minister also accused US authorities of "misleading public opinion" to believe the new inter-Korean dialogue is the result of "their harshest sanctions and pressure imposed on our country."
Rather, Ri said, the "dramatic turning point" for peace and stability on the Korean peninsula "where a touch-and-go war danger was prevailing is entirely thanks to the noble love for the nation by the respected comrade Kim Jong Un," North Korea's leader.
Kim unexpectedly said in his New Year's address that he was willing to send a delegation to the Winter Olympics being held February 9-25 in the South Korean county of Pyeongchang -- and the South Korean government and International Olympic Committee responded positively.
As part of the rapprochement with Seoul, hundreds of North Korean officials, athletes, artists, journalists and a 230-member cheering group will be attending the Olympics, and athletes from the two Koreas will march together under a single flag during the opening ceremony. Ri asked the UN Security Council in the letter to take up "the issue of welcoming the process of improved inter-Korean relations and discouraging the neighboring countries from disturbing the process."
The efforts at reconciliation follow a year of heightened animosities over North Korea's increasingly sophisticated nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, which Pyongyang says can now reach the US mainland. There has been escalating rhetoric between Kim and US President Donald Trump, including back-and-forth over their "nuclear button."
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