North Korea renews call for ending joint military drills - The Korea Times

North Korea renews call for ending joint military drills

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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, center, inspects a Pyongyang factory that makes food for athletes. On Kim's left is Choe Ryong-hae, Workers’ Party of Korea Central Committee secretary. / Yonhap

North Korea renewed its demand for ending the joint military exercises between Seoul and Washington, Sunday, saying there would be no dialogue unless its demand was met.

The Rodong Sinmun, the official organ of the Workers’ Party, said, “It is apparent that any attempts toward dialogue will make no progress unless the nuclear war drills are halted.”

The paper was referring to the Key Resolve and Foal Eagle exercises slated for early March. It also said talks between Seoul and Pyongyang, and Washington and Pyongyang would be impossible.

The North claimed inter-Korean dialogue will progress smoothly and there will be epoch-making improvements in peace and security in East Asia as well as on the Korean Peninsula, should its demand for ending the military drills be met.

Regarding the U.S. assertion that the drill is an annual one, it recalled the U.S. discontinued the Team Spirit Exercise at its request in 1990s.

The paper criticized the U.S. move toward strengthening sanctions against the reclusive nation for its alleged hacking of Sony Pictures. “From an overall perspective, the United States is expected to step up its efforts toward cornering the Korean peninsula on the verge of war this year, instead of seeking to ease tension.”

The U.S. administration has been gearing up its pressure the North over the hacking. The North is rebuffing the move, calling for joint investigation into the case.

“Any mean and malicious tactics would not be useful for us. The U.S. should dare to turn its policy around without sticking to reckless hostile measures against us,” it said.

Shim Jae-yun

I am now the chief editorial writer of The Korea Times. I also worked as the managing editor of the newspaper for 26 months from April 2018. Before that my stints included Politics Desk editor, Business Desk editor, City Desk editor and Culture Desk editor. As a journalist of The Korea Times, the most influential English newspaper of Korea, I have been committed to promoting 'international justice' beyond the social justice pursued by vernacular papers. My career includes working as a visiting scholar in Britain's Cambridge University from 2006-07.

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