North
Korea said on Wednesday it sees no more need to negotiate with the United
States, accusing Washington of plotting to "bring down" its regime,
and threatened to strike back using all its military resources.
North
Korea routinely seeks to raise tensions ahead of annual joint military drills
by U.S. and South Korean forces that usually begin in March. This year,
Pyongyang has offered to suspend nuclear testing if Washington calls off the
exercises.
However,
North Korea's National Defence Commission said on Wednesday the United States
was inching close to "igniting a war of aggression" and that the
Obama administration was working to trigger its collapse.
The
commission, Pyongyang's supreme leadership body, is headed by North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un.
"Since
the gangster-like U.S. imperialists are blaring that they will "bring
down" the DPRK ... the army and people of the DPRK cannot but officially
notify the Obama administration of the USA that the DPRK has neither need nor
willingness to sit at the negotiating table with the U.S. any longer," it
said.
Using the
North's official name of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), it
said Pyongyang had decided "to write the last page of ... U.S.
history".
"(Smaller),
precision and diversified nuclear striking means and ground, naval, underwater,
air and cyber warfare means will be used," the commission said in the
statement carried by the official KCNA news agency.
U.S.
President Barack Obama said in an interview carried on YouTube on Jan. 22 the
Internet would inevitably penetrate even a country as reclusive and closed as
North Korea and bring about change. "Over time you will see a regime like
this collapse," Obama said.
The angry
response by North Korea's defense commission came after its foreign ministry
said on Sunday Washington had rejected its invitation for the top U.S. nuclear
envoy handling North Korea to visit for talks.
Sung Kim,
the U.S. special representative for North Korea policy, said in Beijing he was
open for talks with the North Koreans. However, the State Department denied
there was any plan for talks or change in its position that Pyongyang must
first show it was serious about ending its nuclear ambitions.
No comments:
Post a Comment