产品展示
  • 科鲁兹改装 火焰图腾汽车头贴纸 引擎盖车贴纸划痕 机盖贴车门贴
  • 适用于宝骏560后尾灯总成律动款后组合灯15/16/17款防雾灯刹车灯
  • 五菱宏光S改装专用车贴 荣光面包车拉花长安之星车身腰线贴纸包邮
  • 精全发烧1.8寸海尔气动式超带式喇叭单元 汽车高音头AMT-47
  • 起亚K3智跑K4福瑞迪1.6L丰田16款雷凌花冠60ah汽车电瓶骆驼蓄电池
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车音响

China, Russia cool to US aim for more North Korea sanctions

2024-06-07 19:48:59      点击:751
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un walks around what Pyongyang says is <strong></strong>a Hwasong-17 intercontinental ballistic missile on a launcher at an undisclosed location in North Korea, March 24, in this photo distributed by the North Korean government. AP-Yonhap
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un walks around what Pyongyang says is a Hwasong-17 intercontinental ballistic missile on a launcher at an undisclosed location in North Korea, March 24, in this photo distributed by the North Korean government. AP-Yonhap

North Korea's test of a big new intercontinental ballistic missile prompted the United States to press for stiffer U.N. sanctions Friday, but China and Russia showed little appetite for tightening restrictions that they have been trying to ease.

A day after North Korea's first long-range missile test since 2017, U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield urged the council to condemn the launch and encourage Pyongyang to return to negotiations.

''It was an egregious and unprovoked escalation'' that threatens the world, said Thomas-Greenfield, whose country joined Albania, France, Ireland, Norway and the United Kingdom in calling for the meeting.

Thomas-Greenfield added that the U.S. would propose a measure ''to update and strengthen'' sanctions. She declined to give specifics after the meeting.

US will introduce new UNSC resolution to strengthen sanctions on North KoreaUS will introduce new UNSC resolution to strengthen sanctions on North Korea 2022-03-26 09:39  |  North Korea North Korea has 'likely more in store' after missile test: White House North Korea has 'likely more in store' after missile test: White House 2022-03-25 22:25  |  North Korea North Korea's ICBM launch complicates President-elect Yoon's defense vision North Korea's ICBM launch complicates President-elect Yoon's defense vision 2022-03-25 16:55  |  North Korea The Security Council originally imposed sanctions after the North's first nuclear test in 2006 and has tightened them over the years, in response to further tests and its increasingly sophisticated nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

Britain agreed Friday that more sanctions should be considered, and several other members urged action of some kind.

But veto-wielding China and Russia proposed last fall to lift sanctions that bar their neighbor from exporting seafood and textiles, limit its imports of refined petroleum products and prohibit its citizens from working overseas and sending home their earnings.

Russian Deputy Ambassador Anna Evstigneeva said Friday that further sanctions would ''threaten North Korean citizens with unacceptable socioeconomic and humanitarian problems,'' while Chinese Ambassador Zhang Jun urged the council ''to consider how to accommodate the DPRK's justified security concerns.''

He suggested that the U.S. didn't do enough to respond to the North's 2018 self-imposed moratorium on long-range missile and nuclear weapons tests.

''It is right and proper for the U.S. side to show its goodwill, take actions that have practical relevance and work harder to stabilize the situation, build mutual trust, and relaunch dialogue,'' Zhang said. ''Are they going to come up with concrete actions that can actually solve problems, or are they going to continue to use the (Korean) Peninsula as a bargaining chip in their geopolitical strategy?''

Many council members expressed alarm at the launch and appealed to North Korea to stop.

''The world can ill afford to have multiple crises at this time,'' said Ghanian Ambassador Harold Adlai Agyeman, pointing to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. (AP)


NK holds national conference of security officers for socialist system
N. Korea's youth holds rally against S. Korea