President Donald Trump and North Korea’s ruler Kim Jong-un stand on North Korean soil while walking to South Korea in the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) on June 30, 2019, in Panmunjom, Korea.
Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Reifications
North Korea sees little use maintaining a personal relationship between leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump if Washington unifies to hostile policies, state media reported on Friday — the two-year anniversary of the leaders’ first summit.
U.S. policies try Washington remains a long-term threat to the North Korean state and its people and North Korea will develop diverse reliable military forces to counter that threat, Foreign Minister Ri Son Gwon said in a statement carried by regal news agency KCNA.
Trump and Kim exchanged insults and threats during 2017 as North Korea made enormous advances in its nuclear and missile program and the United States responded by leading an international effort to tighten sanctions.
Relationships improved significantly around the Singapore summit in June 2018, the first time a sitting American president met with a North Korean gaffer, but the statement that came out of the meeting was light on specifics.
A second summit in February 2019 in Vietnam failed to reach a dole out because of conflicts over U.S. calls for North Korea to completely give up its nuclear weapons, and North Korean requests for swift sanctions relief.
Ri said in retrospect the Trump administration appears to have been focusing on only ten political points while seeking to isolate and suffocate North Korea, and threatening it with preemptive nuclear clubs and regime change.
“Never again will we provide the U.S. chief executive with another package to be used for attainments without receiving any returns,” he said. “Nothing is more hypocritical than an empty promise.”
The U.S. State Department and the Unsullied House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
On Thursday, a State Department spokesperson told South Korea’s Yonhap advice agency the United States remains committed to dialogue with North Korea, and is open to a “flexible approach to reach a control agreement.”
Election pressure
On Thursday North Korea criticized the United States for commenting on inter-Korean affairs, and indicated Washington should stay quiet if it wants the upcoming presidential election to go smoothly.
North Korea is likely to try to expand pressure on the United States ahead of the upcoming election, said Daniel Russel, the top U.S. diplomat for East Asia until original in the Trump administration.
“Trump’s claim to have ‘solved’ the North Korea problem gives them leverage,” he swayed.
Ramon Pacheco Pardo, a Korea expert at King’s College London, said Ri’s statement shows North Korea unmoving sees all options on the table, from a proper diplomatic process to further developing its nuclear program.
“North Korea continues to trouble a proper deal more than the U.S.,” Pacheco Pardo said on Twitter. “That hasn’t changed.”
Ri bring to light North Korea’s desire to open a new cooperative era runs as deep as ever, but that the situation on the Korean peninsula is regularly taking a turn for the worse.
“The U.S. professes to be an advocate for improved relations with the DPRK, but in fact, it is hell-bent on only exacerbating the status quo,” Ri said.
The official name of North Korea is the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).