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		Kim's sister says North Korea will never see the South as a diplomatic 
		partner
		[August 20, 2025]  
		By KIM TONG-HYUNG 
		SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ’s powerful 
		sister yet again taunted South Korean efforts to improve ties, state 
		media reported Wednesday, saying that her country will never accept 
		Seoul as a diplomatic partner.
 Kim Yo Jong's remarks fit a longstanding pattern of aggressive language 
		during ongoing South Korea-U.S. military drills, which the North has 
		long denounced as invasion rehearsals, but also reflect a shift in 
		Pyongyang’s approach to its rival.
 
 Her brother has shifted his focus to Moscow, and last year declared that 
		North Korea was abandoning long-standing goals of a peaceful unification 
		with South Korea. He ordered the constitution rewritten to declare the 
		South a permanent enemy.
 
 Kim Yo Jong spurns feelers from new South Korean government
 
 Since the collapse of a 2019 summit with U.S. President Donald Trump 
		during his first term, Kim Jong Un doubled down on his nuclear ambitions 
		while embracing the idea of a “new Cold War.”
 
		
		 
		In Seoul, former President Yoon Suk Yeol, after taking office in 2022, 
		responded by expanding military drills with Washington and Tokyo and 
		seeking stronger assurances of U.S. nuclear deterrence.
 But South Korea’s new liberal President Lee Jae Myung, who replaced Yoon 
		after he was removed from office in disgrace, has pushed to revive 
		dialogue between the Koreas since taking office in June. He's extended 
		olive branches like ending cross-border propaganda broadcasts that 
		irritate Pyongyang.
 
 Lee said in a speech Friday that said his government respects North 
		Korea’s current system and “will not pursue any form of unification by 
		absorption and has no intention of engaging in hostile acts.”
 
 But Kim Yo Jong claimed Seoul’s peace gestures conceal a “sinister 
		intention” to blame Pyongyang for strained relations. She said the 
		“reckless” South Korea-U.S. military drills as a proof of Seoul’s 
		hostility, state media said Wednesday.
 
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            Kim told Foreign Ministry officials during a Tuesday meeting that 
			reconciliation with the South would never happen, and urged them to 
			pursue “proper countermeasures” against Seoul, which she labeled the 
			“most hostile state” and a “faithful dog” of the U.S. 
            Once regarded by the North as a useful go-between for extracting 
			concessions from Washington, South Korea is now viewed in Pyongyang 
			as a regional obstacle to its attempts to carve out a larger role in 
			world affairs.
 In response to Kim Yo Jong’s latest comments, South Korea’s 
			Unification Ministry, which handles inter-Korean affairs, said Lee’s 
			government will continue to take “proactive steps for peace” and 
			called for mutual respect between the countries.
 
 Kim Dong-yub, a professor at South Korea’s University of North 
			Korean Studies, said Kim Yo Jong’s latest remarks were a response to 
			Lee’s speech, “essentially bolting the door shut.”
 
 On Monday, Kim Jong Un also criticized the South Korean-U.S. 
			military drills and vowed a rapid expansion of his nuclear forces as 
			he inspected his most advanced warship being fitted with 
			nuclear-capable systems.
 
 Pyongyang sees opportunity
 
 Russia’s invasion of Ukraine created an opportunity to draw closer 
			to Moscow, which he has supplied with thousands of troops and large 
			supplies of military equipment.
 
 With its alignment with Russia deepening, North Korea has also 
			become more vocal in international affairs beyond the Korean 
			Peninsula, issuing statements on conflicts in the Middle East and 
			issues related to the Taiwan Strait.
 
 During Tuesday’s foreign policy meeting, Kim Yo Jong implied that 
			Pyongyang seeks to compete with Seoul diplomatically, claiming the 
			South “will not even have a subordinate role in the regional 
			diplomatic arena,” which she insisted will be centered on the North.
 
			
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