What
comes to mind is the old Maoist slogan - “US imperialism is a paper
tiger”...if they're asking the military to economise on gasoline and ammunition.
US
sends clear warning to North Korea as Pyongyang declares armistice
void
Obama
security adviser threatens Pyongyang with 'full range of our
capabilities' and urges China to act tough on neighbour
11
March, 2013
The
US has dismissed North Korea's declaration that the 1953 armistice
with Seoul is nullified as "bellicose rhetoric" but warned
Pyongyang that it will face "the full range of our capabilities"
if it were to carry out its threat of a nuclear attack.
Barack
Obama's top national security adviser, Tom Donilon, on Monday called
on China to join in further isolating Pyongyang, following the North
Korean military leadership's declaration that the truce with South
Korea was void after Seoul and the US kicked off a joint military
exercise.
The
annulment of the treaty also follows the UN security council's
imposition of additional sanctions against Pyongyang after it carred
out a third atomic bomb test, and threats by Pyongyang to fire
nuclear weapons at the US and South Korea in response.
"North
Korean officials have made some highly provocative statements. North
Korea's claims may be hyperbolic, but as to the policy of the United
States, there should be no doubt: we will draw upon the full range of
our capabilities to protect against, and to respond to, the threat
posed to us and to our allies by North Korea," Donilon said in a
speech to the Asia Society in New York.
"This
includes not only any North Korean use of weapons of mass destruction
but also, as the president made clear, their transfer of nuclear
weapons or nuclear materials to other states or non-state entities.
Such actions would be considered a grave threat to the United States
and our allies and we will hold North Korea fully accountable for the
consequences."
North
Korean state media said that joint military exercises involving
American and South Korean forces, which began on Monday, had annulled
the truce. The armistice never became a fully-fledged peace agreement
and therefore North and South Korea technically remain at war.
"The
US has reduced the armistice agreement to a dead paper," it
said.
The
US State Department said the military exercises are held annually.
American officials pointed the latest UN sanctions as the real cause
of the threats. The US treasury imposed additional measures on Monday
against the Foreign Trade Bank of North Korea – the primary handler
of hard currency – for its role in the financing of Pyongyang's
development of nuclear weapons.
State
Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said it was not immediately
clear what the impact of North Korea's claim that the truce is
annulled would be – the third time it has made such a statement in
recent years.
"For
more than 60 years this agreement has ensured peace and stability on
the peninsula. So it is concerning to us when any signatory makes a
public statement that they're pulling out of it. But it's not
absolutely evident what the impact of that would be," she said.
Pyongyang
also stopped answering the hotline with South Korea at the border
village of Panmunjom, which is generally tested twice a day. It has
cut off contact via the hotline at least five times since the 1990s.
Donilon
said the US would not be deterred by Pyongyang's threats. "The
United States will not accept North Korea as a nuclear state. Nor
will we stand by while it seeks to develop a nuclear-armed missile
that can target the United States," he said.
Donilon
called for North Korea to return to negotiations, but warned that
Washington will not be fooled twice after helping Pyongyang with food
and other supplies as part of an earlier agreement to halt nuclear
development, only to discover that its communist leaders had gone
back on their word.
"The
United States refuses to reward bad North Korean behaviour. The
United States will not play the game of accepting empty promises or
yielding to threats. As former secretary of defence Bob Gates has
said, we won't buy the same horse twice. We have made clear our
openness to authentic negotiations with North Korea. In return,
however, we've only seen provocations and extreme rhetoric," he
said.
"To
get the assistance it desperately needs and the respect it claims it
wants, North Korea will have to change course. Otherwise, the United
States will continue to work with allies and partners to tighten
national and international sanctions to impede North Korea's nuclear
and missile programmes."
Donilon
praised China for backing the latest UN security council sanctions
against North Korea, but called on Beijing to further isolate
Pyongyang.
"We
believe that no country, including China, should conduct business as
usual with a North Korea that threatens its neighbours. China's
interest in stability on the Korean peninsula argues for a clear path
to ending North Korea's nuclear program. We welcome China's support
at the UN security council and its continued insistence that North
Korea completely, verifiably and irreversibly abandon its WMD and
ballistic missile programmes," he said.
But
the White House also offered a carrot, with the prospect of
substantial economic help if North Korea is serious about abandoning
nuclear weapons. Donilon pointed to the transformation in relations
with Burma, which had, he said, received billions in debt
forgiveness, development assistance and new investment.
"As
he has said many times, President Obama came to office willing to
offer his hand to those who would unclench their fists. The United
States is prepared to help North Korea develop its economy and feed
its people, but it must change its current course," said
Donilon.
"Anyone
who doubts the president's commitment needs look no further than
Burma, where new leaders have begun a process of reform. Obama's
historic visit is proof of our readiness to start transforming a
relationship marked by hostility into one of greater co-operation."
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