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NUKEWARS
Nuclear weapons not a toy, says N. Korea's China envoy
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) July 28, 2015


N.Korea could launch missile test in October: envoy
United Nations, United States (AFP) July 28, 2015 - A North Korean ambassador said in New York on Tuesday that Pyongyang might launch a new missile test in October.

Any rocket launch would almost certainly be viewed by the international community as a disguised ballistic missile test and result in the imposition of fresh sanctions.

Asked about reports of a possible missile test in October, the ambassador said October 10 marks the 70th anniversary of the founding of the North's ruling Workers' Party.

"I'm sure that we will have a great, grand celebration," Jang Il Han told a rare press conference, convened at North Korea's permanent mission to the United Nations.

Jang, who is tasked with relations with the United States, said North Korea was "free to do whatever we want."

"We stated in the past that we will respond to the military deterrence and pressure of the United States with modernization and expansion and strengthening of our nuclear forces.

"So I'll not rule out any possibility of doing one of these things but... I'm not in a position to say with confidence it will happen," he added.

Last week, South Korea's Yonhap news agency cited "credible intelligence" that North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un had ordered the launch of a satellite to mark the party's 70th anniversary.

According to an unnamed government source, North Korea has completed work on an extended 67-meter (220-foot) gantry capable of handling a rocket twice the size of the 30-meter Unha-3 rocket launched in December, 2012.

The Unha-3 launch was widely condemned overseas as a ballistic missile test and triggered additional UN sanctions.

North Korea is banned under UN Security Council resolutions from carrying out any launch using ballistic missile technology, although repeated small-range missile tests have gone unpunished.

North Korea's nuclear weapons are "not a plaything" and their future is not up for negotiation, Pyongyang's ambassador to China said Tuesday, ahead of a visit by a US envoy.

The comments by Ji Jae-Ryong came after an international deal with Tehran to curb Iran's nuclear capabilities in return for the lifting of crippling sanctions.

In a rare press conference in Beijing, Ji said the North's nuclear capability was "not a plaything to be put on the negotiating table as it is the essential means to protect sovereignty and vital rights from the US nuclear threat and hostile policy".

He spoke at the North Korean embassy in front of pictures of the country's founder Kim Il-Sung and his son Kim Jong-Il, father of current leader Kim Jong-Un.

The North "remains unchanged in the mission of its nuclear force as long as the US continues pursuing its hostile policy" towards it, he said, accusing Washington of basing atomic weapons in the South and turning it into "a largest outpost nuclear base".

"We have the power to cope with any kinds of war methods of the US imperialists and have the strong power to restrain the provocative nuclear war acts of the US," he said.

Ji spoke in Korean and his remarks were translated into English by an official interpreter.

His uncompromising remarks came as Washington's envoy to the six-party talks -- a forum aimed at ending the North Korea's nuclear weapons programme through negotiations -- was on a regional tour and due in Beijing Tuesday.

Sydney Seiler said in Seoul Monday that the Iran agreement demonstrated US openness in de-nuclearisation talks.

Both Tehran and Pyongyang, allies since Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, have been subjected to tough economic sanctions over their controversial nuclear programmes.

The deal reached with Iran was touted by some as a possible blueprint for eventual negotiations with North Korea, which has staged three successful nuclear tests in 2006, 2009 and 2013.

But Ji's comments echo those of a spokesman for Pyongyang's foreign ministry, who said the North's situation differed from Iran as it "is a nuclear weapons state both in name and reality and it has interests as a nuclear weapons state".

The six parties involved in the talks -- the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States -- have not met for more than six years, and every effort to revive the dialogue process has stalled.


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