North Korea's foreign ministry has called on the United Nations to demand an immediate halt to combined military drills by the United States and South Korea, saying they were raising tensions that threaten the security of the Korean peninsula.
The drills and rhetoric from the allies are "irresponsibly raising the level of confrontation," Kim Son Gyong, vice foreign minister for international organisations, said in a statement carried by state news agency KCNA on Sunday, March 5.
The United States and South Korea will conduct more than 10 days of large-scale military exercises in March, including amphibious landings, officials from the two countries said on Friday, March 3.
The
U.S. and South Korea say the exercises are in self-defence and are
necessary to counter the rising threats from North Korea's ballistic
missile and nuclear weapons programmes, which are banned by U.N.
Security Council resolutions.
North Korea on Saturday blamed
the United States for what it said was the collapse of international
arms control systems and said Pyongyang's nuclear weapons were a just
response to ensure the balance of power in the Korean peninsula.
The
allies also conducted a combined air drill with an American long-range
bomber and South Korean fighter aircraft on Friday, and have been
staging weeks of exercises for special rations troops.
"The UN
and the international community will have to strongly urge the U.S. and
South Korea to immediately halt their provocative remarks and joint
military exercises," Kim said.
It is regrettable that the U.N. has been consistently silent on the exercises, which have a "clear aggressive nature," he said.
Last
month Kim issued a statement saying UN Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres has been "extremely unfair, unbalanced" on North Korea's
missile tests.
No comments:
Post a Comment