North Korea could consider change of tack, Kim warns

Pyongyang ‘might be compelled to explore a new path’ if US doesn’t lift sanctions linked to nuclear program, leader warns

People watch a television news screen showing a New Year speech by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a railway station in Seoul on January 1, 2019. (Jung Yeon-je/AFP)
People watch a television news screen showing a New Year speech by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a railway station in Seoul on January 1, 2019. (Jung Yeon-je/AFP)

SEOUL, South Korea (AFP) — Nuclear-armed North Korea wants good relations with the US but could consider a change of approach if Washington maintains its sanctions, leader Kim Jong Un warned in his New Year speech Tuesday after 12 months of diplomatic rapprochement.

At a summit with US President Donald Trump in Singapore in June the two signed a vaguely worded pledge on denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.

But progress has since stalled with Pyongyang and Washington arguing over what that means.

“If the US fails to carry out its promise to the world… and remains unchanged in its sanctions and pressure upon the DPRK,” Kim said Tuesday, “we might be compelled to explore a new path for defending the sovereignty of our country and supreme interests of our state.”

He was willing to meet Trump again at any time, he added, “to produce results welcomed by the international community.”

The North is demanding sanctions relief — it is subject to multiple measures over its banned nuclear weapons and ballistic missile program — and has condemned US insistence on its nuclear disarmament as “gangster-like.”

In this photo taken on December 31, 2018, revelers pose for photos before an ice sculpture during a New Year’s eve countdown event and fireworks display on Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. (Kim Won Jin/AFP)

Washington is pushing to maintain the measures against the North until its “final, fully verified denuclearization.”

Kim’s speech “expressed his frustration with the lack of progress in negotiations so far,” said former South Korean vice unification minister Kim Hyung-seok.

The North Korean leader “obviously had certain expectations that the US would take certain steps — however rudimentary they are — after the North blew up a nuclear test site and took other steps. But none of them materialized.

“He is faced with this urgent task to improve his ‘socialist economy’ — which is impossible to achieve without lifting of the sanctions.”

In marked contrast with January 1, 2018, when he ordered mass production of nuclear warheads and ballistic missiles, Kim said the North had “declared that we would no longer produce, test, use or spread our nuclear arsenal,” calling for the US to take “corresponding measures.”

The production pledge was a “significant evolution in leadership intent, if true,” Ankit Panda of the Federation of American Scientists said on Twitter, but credibility was an issue.

“All this might offer is a temporary cap on warhead production as long as talks are on with the US — to be withdrawn when sanctions relief doesn’t arrive,” he added.

This photo taken on December 31, 2018 shows a general view of revelers during a New Year’s eve countdown event and fireworks display at Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea. (Kim Won Jin/AFP)

The line was not included in the first English-language summary of the speech by the North’s official KCNA news agency.

Year of rapprochement

Kim spoke sitting in a dark leather armchair, in a large office lined with packed bookshelves and paintings of his predecessors, father Kim Jong Il and grandfather Kim Il Sung.

As he began speaking — in a deep, gravelly voice and wearing a dark suit and blue tie — a clock behind him read at moments after 12.

But at times during the address it was blurred out and towards the end of the half-hour broadcast it was close to 1, suggesting the speech was recorded in several takes.

The leader’s New Year speech is a key moment in the North Korean political calendar, reviewing the past and setting out goals for the future.

The 2018 address was a crucial catalyst for the developments that followed.

It came after a year of high tensions when the North made rapid progress with its weapons development, carrying out its sixth nuclear test — by far its most powerful to date — and launching rockets capable of reaching the entire US mainland.

In this file photo taken on June 11, 2018 North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un, right, walks with US President Donald Trump, left, during a break in talks at their historic US-North Korea summit, at the Capella Hotel on Sentosa island in Singapore. (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb)

The two leaders had traded personal insults — Trump mocked Kim as “Little Rocket Man,” who in turn called him a “mentally deranged US dotard” — and threats of war as fears of conflict rose.

In last year’s speech Kim warned “the nuclear button is on my office desk all the time,” but also offered to send a team to the forthcoming Winter Olympics in the South.

That opened the way for the South’s dovish President Moon Jae-In to play the role of peace broker.

Seoul and Washington are in a security alliance and the US stations 28,500 troops in the South to protect it against its neighbor.

A rapid sequence of developments followed, with athletes and a senior delegation led by Kim’s powerful sister going to the Pyeongchang Games in February, before Kim met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing ahead of the Singapore summit with Trump.

Kim also met with Moon three times in 2018 — twice at the border truce village of Panmunjom and once in the North’s capital — and at the weekend vowed to meet Moon “frequently” this year.

Seoul and Pyongyang have pursued several reconciliation initiatives in recent months, including projects to upgrade the North’s outdated rail infrastructure and reconnect it with the South.

Much of Kim’s speech Tuesday focused on North Korea’s moribund economy, saying that improving people’s lives was his top priority and tackling energy shortages was an urgent task.

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