North Korea says it could launch an intercontinental ballistic missile "at any time," even as Pyongyang appeared to offer Donald Trump an avenue for future talks.
Tensions on
the Korean peninsula have risen considerably since leader Kim Jong Un
said in his new year's message that the country was close to testing an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM)capable of delivering a nuclear weapon to the US mainland.
In
a statement Sunday, a spokesman from North Korea's foreign minister
said "the U.S. is wholly to blame" for the development of its missile
program.
Speaking to NBC's Meet the
Press Sunday, Defense Secretary Ash Carter called it a "serious threat"
and said the US would shoot down any missile aimed at it or an ally.
China
and South Korea on Monday denounced the North Korea missile threat, and
warned that a test could lead to further sanctions.
"If
North Korea disregards our warning and launches an ICBM, it will face
more powerful and thorough sanctions and pressure by the international
community," South Korean Defense Ministry spokesman Moon Sang-gyun said.
Strict international sanctions have so far failed to prevent Pyongyang from developing its nuclear program.
In
the Sunday statement, the country's foreign ministry alluded to those
sanctions and said US officials "spout rubbish" when they assume Obama's
policies will be maintained in future.
"Anyone
who wants to deal with (North Korea) would be well advised to secure a
new way of thinking after having clear understanding of it," the
statement said.
John Delury,
assistant professor of international studies at Yonsei University said
the statement was "definitely a message to the Trump transition team to
say don't go down this dead end (of sanctions)."
Following Pyongyang's apparent nuke threat in Kim's new year's speech, Trump tweeted
that "North Korea just stated that it is in the final stages of
developing a nuclear weapon capable of reaching parts of the US. It
won't happen!"
Trump adviser
Kellyanne Conway was later asked on "Good Morning America" what the
President-elect intended to do to stop North Korea's nukes. "He's not
stated that publicly, and he won't before he's inaugurated," Conway
said.
Analysts have said that
Trump, through his own pronouncements and the failure of the Obama
administration to prevent North Korea from developing its nuclear
arsenal, is left with few options.
Since
six-party talks broke down in 2009, North Korea has claimed to have
conducted four successful nuclear tests, strengthening its hand in any
future negotiations.
"There's no question signaling is going on," Delury said.
"(The
North Koreans) are trying to create some space for Trump to reverse the
Obama policy and talk with them in a serious way."
Bruce Bennett, a senior defense analyst at the Rand Corporation, told CNN last week
that despite North Korea's apparent progress on a warhead, it doesn't
yet have good enough missile and rocket technology to deliver a nuke.
The US has been working with South Korea to deploy the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system (THAAD) in that country, but the future of the program is in doubt under a Trump administration.
-------CNN
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments are priceless!