North Korea steps up criticism of South-U.S. deterrence plan

Home > National > North Korea

print dictionary print

North Korea steps up criticism of South-U.S. deterrence plan

A newscaster of North Korea's state-run Korean Central Television on April 30 informs of North Korean leadership's discontent towards the so-called ″Washington Declaration.″ [KOREAN CENTRAL TELEVISION]

A newscaster of North Korea's state-run Korean Central Television on April 30 informs of North Korean leadership's discontent towards the so-called ″Washington Declaration.″ [KOREAN CENTRAL TELEVISION]

 
North Korean workers and members of social groups have joined the North's criticism of a recent summit agreement between South Korea and the United States on strengthening U.S. extended deterrence, according to state media Thursday.
 
The working class and trade union members held a protest in the border city of Gaesong the previous day, saying that the whole country was "enraged with the will to destruct the enemies," according to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).
 
The KCNA said participants slammed Seoul and Washington over their joint military drills and the deployment of strategic assets, saying that the recent "nuclear war scheme" laid bare to the world who is threatening peace and safety on the Korean Peninsula and the region.
 
In a separate dispatch, the KCNA reported that ranking members of the Socialist Women's Union of Korea and women workers held a meeting the previous day and "sternly pledged their determination for revenge."
 
The state media also reported that slogans and propaganda material denouncing Seoul and Washington and encouraging people to take revenge against them were displayed across the country.
 
The reports are the latest in Pyongyang's escalating criticism of Seoul and Washington following an agreement by President Yoon Suk Yeol and U.S. President Joe Biden last week to strengthen Washington's extended deterrence against the North's threats.
 
Kim Yo-jong, the influential sister of the North's leader Kim Jong-un, issued the North's first response to the Yoon-Biden summit Saturday, warning Pyongyang could take "more decisive" action to deal with the change in the security environment.
 
On Wednesday, the KCNA reported that North Korean youths held a rally where participants burned an effigy depicting the "invaders and provocateurs," apparently referring to Yoon and Biden.
 

Yonhap
Log in to Twitter or Facebook account to connect
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
help-image Social comment?
s
lock icon

To write comments, please log in to one of the accounts.

Standards Board Policy (0/250자)