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North Korea vows to maintain nuclear programs
North Korea said Friday that it will never give up its suspected nuclear weapons programs, comparing UN inspections to "taking off our pants" and giving the United States an excuse to invade.
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North Korea said Friday that it will never give up its suspected nuclear weapons programs, comparing UN inspections to "taking off our pants" and giving the United States an excuse to invade.
With his Stalinist government locked in a standoff with the United States and its allies over its nuclear ambitions, North Korean leader Kim Jong Il reportedly visited an air force base and told pilots he was satisfied with their readiness to "beat back the enemy."
Meanwhile, South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun attended the launch Friday of a new stealth warship capable of electronic spying on North Korea.
The developments underscored tensions on the Korean peninsula over demands by the United States, South Korea's key ally, that the North scrap its alleged nuclear weapons program and let UN inspectors return.
North Korea has accused the United States of planning to invade after it's done fighting in Iraq and said recently that it intends to boost its military defences.
Pyongyang said Friday that the United States was "plotting to apply the pattern in Iraq to us . . . by demanding [nuclear] inspections to find an excuse for invasion."
"Allowing inspections and disarming ourselves are like taking off our pants," said Pyongyang's state-run Central TV, which was monitored by South Korean Yonhap news agency. "The United States' sinister design is not in inspections themselves but in using them to spread rumours of weapons of mass destruction and find an excuse for armed intervention."
Also Friday, the Russian government ordered officials to work out "preventive measures" to defend national interests and the population in the country's Far East should the crisis spin out of control, a top diplomat said.
"As a result of the positions of the United States and North Korea, which do not permit the start of negotiations, unfortunately the situation on the Korean peninsula continues to sharpen and is approaching a point beyond which could lie an uncontrollable reaction," Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Losyukov was quoted as telling the Interfax news agency.
North Korea's KCNA news agency reported that the country's leader, Kim Jong Il, inspected Flying Unit 887 on Thursday to brief pilots. It did not say where the air base was located.
"He noted with great satisfaction that they [pilots] are always maintaining a high degree of revolutionary vigilance and (are) fully prepared to courageously beat back the enemy any time," the report said.
Kim's comments came as South Korea launched its new radar-evading ship equipped for electronic monitoring as well as anti-ship and anti-submarine warfare, navy officials said. The 150-metre-long vessel is South Korea's most advanced warship.
The country already has an unspecified number of stealth warships.
Washington has accused the North of having a secret nuclear weapons program in violation of a 1994 pact. U.S. President George W. Bush says he wants to solve the problem peacefully, but he has not ruled out a military solution.
On Wednesday, the UN Security Council refused to act on a U.S. request to condemn North Korea for pulling out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty because of strong opposition from China and Russia.
North Korea insists on direct talks with Washington over the nuclear dispute. Washington wants the problem to be addressed in a multilateral forum including Russia, China, Japan and South Korea.
In Beijing, visiting South Korean Foreign Minister Yoon Young-kwan said after meeting senior Chinese officials that he was "cautiously optimistic" that the nuclear crisis can be resolved peacefully.
South Korea has been urging Beijing, a major ally of Pyongyang, to help persuade North Korean leaders to join multilateral talks.
In Tokyo, Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi and Russia's visiting Russian Defence Minster Sergei Ivanov agreed Friday to seek a peaceful solution to the North Korean nuclear crisis, Japanese officials said.
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