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Al-Ahed Telegram

N Korea Criticizes «Hostile Policy» As US Diplomat Visits S Korea

N Korea Criticizes «Hostile Policy» As US Diplomat Visits S Korea
folder_openKoreas access_time4 years ago
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By Staff, Agencies

A US report calling North Korea a sponsor of terrorism shows a “hostile policy” that prevents progress in denuclearization talks, the isolated nation said on Tuesday, as a senior US diplomat was set to arrive in the neighboring South.

North Korea accused the US of failing to show flexibility after a breakdown last month in the first talks between their officials since President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un agreed in June to reopen negotiations.

“The channel of dialogue between the DPRK and the US is more and more narrowing due to such attitude,” North Korean state news agency KCNA said, citing a foreign ministry official, and using the country’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea [DPRK].

A recent US State Department report on terrorism “proves once again” that US rejection of North Korea indicated “a hostile policy”, it added.

The agency was referring to “Country Reports on Terrorism 2018”, issued last week, which reaffirmed North Korea’s re-designation as a state sponsor of terrorism.

Tuesday’s statement came ahead of a visit to Seoul by US Assistant Secretary of State David Stilwell, who is expected to discuss the stalled talks with North Korea, as well as the South’s decision to end an intelligence-sharing pact with Japan.

US officials did not describe Stilwell’s agenda in detail, but said he would discuss the strength of the US-South Korea alliance and cooperation across foreign policies.

Washington has urged South Korea to rethink a decision to end an intelligence-sharing agreement scrapped in an escalating political and economic dispute with Japan.

“We do, of course, encourage the Korean side to return to this agreement, because it benefits us, benefits you, and it certainly benefits them as well,” Stilwell said in late October in Tokyo.

On Tuesday, Kim In-chul, a spokesman for South Korea’s foreign ministry, said there was no change in its stance not to renew the intelligence-sharing pact, however.

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