North Korea’s Kim Blames US For Tensions

North Korea’s Kim Blames US For Tensions
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has blamed the United States for tensions on the peninsula and accused the South of hypocrisy, state media reported Tuesday, as he opened an exhibition showcasing his nuclear-armed country’s weapons.

The “wrong judgment and acts” of the US meant instability could not be resolved, he said in an address to the “Self-Defence 2021” display, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.

Pyongyang is under multiple international sanctions over its banned nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes, which have made rapid progress under Kim.

In 2017, it tested missiles that can reach the whole of the continental United States and carried out its most powerful nuclear explosion to date. Pyongyang says it needs its arsenal to protect itself against a US invasion.

Analysts say North Korea is seeking to normalise its status as a nuclear power.

The Biden administration has repeatedly stated that it has no hostile intent towards Pyongyang, but Kim said: “Its behaviours provide us with no reason why we should believe in them.

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‘I wonder if there is any person or state who believes in its claim,” he added according to KCNA, “and, if any, I am curious to know who they are’.

However, he insisted that North Korea’s weapons were for self-defence and not aimed at any particular country.

He was also shown sitting smoking with senior officials and officers, with huge photo portraits of the leader in military uniform hung in the exhibition hall.

His address came after North Korea in recent weeks tested a long-range cruise missile, a train-launched weapon, and what it said was a hypersonic warhead.

In 2018, Kim became the first North Korean leader ever to meet a sitting US president at a headline-grabbing Singapore summit.

But the talks process has been largely at a standstill since a second meeting in Hanoi the following year collapsed over sanctions relief and what Pyongyang would be willing to give up in return.

The Biden administration has said it is willing to meet North Korean officials at any time or place, without preconditions, in its efforts to seek denuclearisation.

Kim’s comments and the show itself were intended to justify Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programmes as ‘part of its right to self-defence’, said Park Won-gon, professor of North Korean studies at Ewha Womans University.

‘North Korea held the exhibition on purpose to claim that their weapons development programmes are no different from those of other countries,‘ he told reporters.

AFRICA DAILY NEWS, NEW YORK

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