产品展示
  • 瓦尔塔EFB70AH启停蓄电池配途观L帕萨特凌度奥迪A3Q3原装汽车电瓶
  • 现代朗动装饰用品汽车改装专用配件中控仪表台避光垫防晒隔热遮阳
  • 瓦尔塔AGM80AH启停汽车电瓶新款别克GL8威朗君越君威自由光蓄电池
  • 瓦尔塔80D26L/R马自达6睿翼长城哈佛H3/H5/H6原装70AH12V汽车电瓶
  • 凯美瑞第七代八代10寸低音炮音响改装补形音箱行李厢隐藏式低音箱
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

North Korea won't give up nuclear weapons: unification minister

2024-06-15 09:45:25      点击:473
By Kim Rahn

Cho Myoung-gyon
Cho Myoung-gyon
Unification Minister Cho Myoung-gyon said Wednesday the chances of North Korea giving up its nuclear weapons are extremely low.

The remark by one of the nation's top government officials in charge of North Korea issues came as international society has been intensifying sanctions against Pyongyang to make it scrap its nuclear program.

In a lecture organized by the Chinese Embassy in Seoul, the Korea-China Leaders Society and a forum of next-generation leaders of Korea and China, he said the chances for the North giving up its nuclear ambitions are very low when looking at the situation with a cool head.

"It is a euphemistic expression; for now, it might not be wrong to say there is no chance for North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons, because it believes nuclear weapons are its lifeline," Cho said.

He said the sanctions on the North are gradually producing an effect but only adding sanctions cannot make the Kim Jong-un regime give up its nuclear weapons.

"Will Kim give up the nuclear weapons when his people suffer from starvation? He believes his regime and North Korean society will collapse if he gives up nuclear weapons, so he will hold out for as long as possible in such circumstances," Cho said.

The minister said a military option to resolve the nuclear issue had been mentioned by previous administrations as well, but noted that such an option now poses a much higher risk.

"It could produce miserable results which we cannot handle, so we have to exclude military action in resolving the issue."

Cho pointed out the needs to set conditions to make North Korea give up nuclear weapons. "An economic approach is required. I don't mean we need to throw money at the North under the United Nations Security Council sanctions, but we need to take an economic approach on a level that does not damage such pressure," he said. "I seek to change the situation in the North and resolve the nuclear issue through cooperation with the North."

Regarding Pyongyang's nuclear capability, the minister said experts predict the country will be able to complete developing the weapons in two years, but added there is a chance for it to do so by next year.

Cho also reiterated the government stance not to redeploy U.S. tactical nuclear weapons here to deter the North, a deterrence option pursued by the main opposition Liberty Korea Party. "From the government's point of view, the redeployment is practically impossible and we are not considering it for now," he said.

"Redeploying tactical nuclear weapons means we acknowledge the North possesses a nuclear capability. There is a big difference between officially recognizing the North as a nuclear state and not doing so."

He said redeployment may cause a similar response as the deployment of a U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, which has brought strong backlash and economic retaliation from China which does not want the expansion of the U.S. military presence in Northeast Asia.

"We have already been suffering from difficulties regarding THAAD. If we say we would redeploy U.S. tactical nuclear weapons, the same trouble can take place," he said.

Crocodile casually strolls into backyard, gets thwarted by wheelie bins
Inside Amazon's Prime Now warehouse the week before Christmas