Fire and fury: With missile launch, North Korea shows ire at neighbor
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[July 26, 2019]
By Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un's blistering criticism of South Korea as he oversaw his latest
missile launch this week sparked new questions over the South's role in
mediating a nuclear deal between the North and the United States,
analysts said.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in has been one of the most vocal
proponents of engagement with the North, using last year's Winter
Olympics to host its delegations and then meeting Kim at summits filled
with feel-good imagery, smiles, and hand-holding.
But Moon has been unable to convince Washington to ease sanctions and
allow economic cooperation between the neighbors, nor has he persuaded
Kim to take major steps toward giving up his nuclear weapons.
On Friday, North Korea called the previous day's missile launches a
warning to South Korean "warmongers" to stop importing weapons and
holding joint military drills, with Kim explicitly urging Moon not to
ignore them.
Kim may be impatient with what he sees as South Korea overpromising and
underdelivering, said Jenny Town, a managing editor at 38 North, a
U.S.-based project that studies North Korea.
"The North Koreans have made several statements challenging Moon to move
forward, but obviously the situation has left Seoul unable to do so,"
she said.
For his part, Moon said there had been "a lot of progress so far in
inter-Korean relations and North Korea-U.S. relations, but we still have
a long way to go."
"I think the biggest challenge is national unity," he added, in comments
to a group of Buddhist leaders in Seoul.
North Korea's growing frustration with its neighbor culminated in the
missile tests as a protest against the South's acquisition of new
weapons, such as U.S. F-35 stealth fighters, and its participation in
military drills with the United States.
Kim's comments showed how skeptical North Korea has become regarding the
South's usefulness in talks with the United States, said Shin Beom-chul
of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul.
"To them, the South Korean government is only a nuisance," he said. "So
the message is either 'Persuade the United States,' or 'Stay out of
it.'"
Overseeing Thursday's launches, Kim Jong Un said the new missiles had to
be developed to neutralize the weapons being acquired by South Korea and
turn them into "scrap iron".
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A view of North Korea's missile launch on Thursday, in this undated
picture released by North Korea's Central News Agency (KCNA) on July
26, 2019. KCNA/via REUTERS
South Korea's acquisition of American F-35 stealth fighter jets, the
first of which arrived in March, would force its neighbor to develop
and test "special armaments" to destroy the aircraft, the North had
warned in mid-July.
While Moon has faced some domestic concern that national security
could be affected by his North Korean pacts, from a no-fly zone to
fewer guard posts and landmines along the heavily fortified border,
he has also pushed ahead with plans to modernize and invest in the
South's already large military.
In January the defense ministry unveiled a plan to boost military
spending for the next five years by an additional 270.7 trillion won
($228 billion).
Still, some observers believe Kim Jong Un is leaving space for
engagement by focusing on South Korea's military.
"The state media report shows the North was still willing to
maintain inter-Korean ties, as they mostly targeted the military
forces, not the whole government," said Kim Dong-yup, a professor at
Kyungnam University's Far East Institute in Seoul.
An official at Moon's office said it would not comment on the state
media report but the government remained committed to working to
revive momentum for nuclear talks.
Poor relations have also prompted a show of reluctance by Pyongyang
in accepting 50,000 tons of rice South Korea offered as food aid to
its impoverished neighbor.
A South Korean official said the government discussed the plan with
the World Food Programme, but Pyongyang had recently showed a
"negative" attitude, citing the joint military drills.
Attempts to discuss two South Korean sailors detained by the North
have also gone unanswered, the official added.
(Reporting by Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by
Joyce Lee; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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