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KCNA: Kim of North Korea says the country will assert its nuclear status? ?

KCNA: Kim of North Korea says the country will assert its nuclear status? ?
KCNA: Kim of North Korea says the country will assert its nuclear status? ?

KCNA, the state news agency in North Korea, reported that Kim Jong Un believes exercising 'the?country’s?position as a nuclear-armed state is only way to deal with an unpredictable and complex global security situation.

Kim claimed that "unimaginable and astonishing events" were occurring due to the "gangsterlike" greed and power of hegemonic powers, which made confrontations more violent around the globe. He blamed the U.S., for the worsening of bloodshed in Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

He spoke at a Central Committee Meeting of the ruling Workers' Party that ran from Saturday through Monday, KCNA reported.

Kim said that the U.S., South Korea, and Japan were making the security situation in the Korean Peninsula even more dangerous, by increasing their nuclear posture. He claimed the sole purpose of this was to attack North Korea.

KCNA stated that "to steadily expand and'strengthen' the nuclear forces...and to thoroughly exercise the role of a nuclear weapon state is the correct and unique method to actively and confidently deal with the unpredictable -international military and political situations becoming more complicated in many ways,"

KCNA didn't elaborate on the specific actions that could be taken in relation to the country's nuclear weapons.

Kim?also ordered a buildup of conventional weaponry and accelerated the construction of a strategic guided missile cruiser weighing 10,000 tons, KCNA reported.

Yang Moo Jin, a professor of North Korean Studies at the University of North Korean Studies, Seoul, said that the comments show Pyongyang’s refusal to denuclearize and its push for recognition as a nuke state.

Yang stated that North Korea has "once again" reaffirmed the fact that denuclearisation discussions are off-limits. Yang added it would only enter into negotiations "as an equal nuclear weapons state," possibly focusing more on arms reduction than dismantlement.

He said that such talks would require the acceptance of a minimal deterrent, and sanctions relief. This is fundamentally different from proposals for phased denuclearisation, like those made by South Korean president Lee Jae Myung in his letter to the U.S. Donald Trump was at the G7.

Yang claimed that Pyongyang was using references to the U.S. South Korea Nuclear Consultative Group (a?body aimed to deter North Korea's threat of nuclear weapons) and Seoul's ambitions for a nuclear submarine to justify their nuclear buildup.

North Korea has ignored a?slew? of sanctions imposed between 2006 and 2017, by the United Nations as well as the U.S., which prohibited Pyongyang from developing nuclear weapons or ballistic missiles that could deliver them. Its stance is alarming regional powers.

The U.S.A., China, and South Korea have been trying to convince it for years that nothing will make them give up their atomic weapons.

Kim said that the party meeting was also a chance to highlight the push for modernisation of coal mining and redevelopment of mining communities.

Yang noted that coal remained North Korea's primary energy source, despite plans to upgrade it in order to ease chronic energy shortages. (Reporting and editing by Matthew Lewis, Ed Davies and Jack Kim in Seoul)

(source: Reuters)