Tag: KCNA

  • North Korea accuses CIA of ‘bio-chemical’ plot against leadership

    North Korea on Friday accused the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and South Korea’s intelligence service of a plot to attack its “supreme leadership” with a bio-chemical weapon and said such a “pipe-dream” could never succeed.

    Tension on the Korean peninsula has been high for weeks, driven by concern that North Korea might conduct its sixth nuclear test or test-launch another ballistic missile in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions.

    Reclusive North Korea warned this week that U.S. hostility had brought the region to the brink of nuclear war.

    The North’s Ministry of State Security released a statement saying “the last-ditch effort” of U.S. “imperialists” and the South had gone “beyond the limits”.

    The North’s KCNA news agency in a statement said: “the CIA and the Intelligence Service (IS) of south Korea, hotbed of evils in the world, hatched a vicious plot to hurt the supreme leadership of the DPRK.

    “Those acts have been put into the extremely serious phase of implementation after crossing the threshold of the DPRK”, referring to the North by its official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

    “A hideous terrorists’ group, which the CIA and the IS infiltrated into the DPRK on the basis of covert and meticulous preparations to commit state-sponsored terrorism against the supreme leadership of the DPRK by use of bio-chemical substance, has been recently detected.”

    The U.S. Embassy in Seoul and South Korea’s National Intelligence Service were not immediately available for comment.

    The U.S. military has said CIA director Mike Pompeo visited South Korea this week and met the NIS chief for discussions.

    KCNA said the two intelligence services “ideologically corrupted” and bribed a North Korean surnamed Kim and turned him into “a terrorist full of repugnance and revenge against the supreme leadership of the DPRK”.

    “They hatched a plot of letting human scum Kim commit bomb terrorism targeting the supreme leadership during events at the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun and at military parade and public procession after his return home,” KCNA said.

    “They told him that assassination by use of biochemical substances including radioactive substance and nano poisonous substance is the best method that does not require access to the target, their lethal results will appear after six or twelve months…

    “Then they handed him over 20,000 dollars on two occasions and a satellite transmitter-receiver and let him get versed in it.”

    North Korea conducted an annual military parade, featuring a display of missiles and overseen by top leader Kim Jong Un and his right-hand men on April 15 and then a large, live-fire artillery drill 10 days later.

    KCNA, which often carries shrill, bellicose threats against the United States, gave lengthy details about the alleged plot but said it could never be accomplished.

    “Criminals going hell-bent to realise such a pipe dream cannot survive on this land even a moment,” it said.

    U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said on Wednesday that Washington was working on more sanctions against North Korea if it takes steps that merit a new response.

    He also warned other countries their firms could face so-called secondary sanctions for doing illicit business with Pyongyang.

    Tillerson said the Trump administration had been “leaning hard into China … to test their willingness to use their influence, their engagement with the regime”.

    Two women accused of killing the estranged half-brother of North Korean leader Kim with a chemical weapon appeared in court in Malaysia last month.

    They allegedly smeared the man’s face with the toxic VX nerve agent, a chemical described by the UN as a weapon of mass destruction, at Kuala Lumpur airport on Feb. 13.

  • N/Korea accuses U.S. of plot to assassinate president

    N/Korea accuses U.S. of plot to assassinate president

    North Korea is accusing the United States of America (USA) and South Korean of a joint plot to kill its leader, Kim Jong-un, according to state media report.

    The ministry of state security said a terrorist group backed by the CIA and South Korea’s intelligence agency had entered the country to attack Kim with a bio-chemical substance.

    It said North Korea would find and “mercilessly destroy” the terrorists.

    It comes amid high tensions in the region.

    North Korean news agency KCNA claimed the alleged plot included the use of “biochemical substances including radioactive substance and nano poisonous substance”.

    The Supreme Leader would have been targeted at a military parade and public procession, with the results not visible for six to 12 months afterwards, it said.

    It alleged that a North Korean, identified only by the surname “Kim”, had been “corrupted and bribed” by South Korean intelligence services while he was working in Russia.

    It listed several payments made to him, and said on his return to Pyongyang he was instructed to provide detailed information about a frequently used event ground and to assess possible methods of attack.

    “Korean-style anti-terrorist attack will be commenced from this moment to sweep away the intelligence and plot-breeding organisations of the U.S. imperialists and the puppet clique,” Pyongyang said.

    A war of words between the West and North Korea has escalated in recent weeks, with the communist enclave   threatening to carry out a sixth nuclear test.

    A week ago, North Korea conducted its second failed ballistic missile test in two weeks.

    The U.S. has sent a warship to the region and installed a controversial anti-missile defence system in South Korea.

     

  • North Korea deports detained Australian missionary

    North Korea on Monday deported a 75-year-old Australian missionary, detained last month for distributing religious material, AFP reported.

    Hong Kong-based John Short arrived in Beijing on a commercial flight from Pyongyang hours after the North’s official KCNA news agency announced he was being released.

    North Korea had arrested him a week ago after leaving “Bible tracts” in a Buddhist temple in Pyongyang during a tour.

  • North Korea to restart nuclear reactor in weapons bid

    North Korea to restart nuclear reactor in weapons bid

    North Korea announced plans on Tuesday to restart a mothballed nuclear reactor that has been closed since 2007, but emphasized it was seeking a deterrent capacity, the state-owned KCNA news agency said.

    It also stated that North Korea did not repeat recent threats to attack South Korea and the U.S.

    The state-owned KCNA news agency said North Korea would restart all nuclear facilities for both electricity and military uses.

    The announcement came amid soaring tensions on the Korean Peninsula as the U.S. bolstered its forces in the region after a series of threats by Pyongyang to attack U.S. bases in the Pacific and to invade South Korea.

    North Korea, one of the most isolated and unpredictable states in the world, conducted its third nuclear test in February but is believed to be some years away from developing nuclear weapons, although it claims to have a deterrent.

    A speech by the North’s young leader Kim Jong-un, delivered on Sunday but published in full by KCNA on Tuesday, appeared to dial down the prospects of a direct confrontation with the U.S. as he stressed that nuclear weapons would ensure the country’s safety as a deterrent.

    “Our nuclear strength is a reliable war deterrent and a guarantee to protect our sovereignty,” Kim said.

    “It is on the basis of a strong nuclear strength that peace and prosperity can exist and so can the happiness of people’s lives.”

    Kim’s speech, delivered to the central committee meeting of the ruling Workers Party of Korea, appeared to signal a small shift from threats against South Korea and the U.S., but it was some distance from any kind of end to the crisis.

    “The fact that this (speech) was made at the party central committee meeting, which is

     

    the highest policy-setting organ, indicates an attempt to highlight economic problems and shift the focus from security to the economy,” said Yang Moo-jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul.

    But if Pyongyang follows through with its plan to restart the nuclear facilities, it will have longer-term security implications for the region.

    Reactivating the aged Soviet-era reactor at the Yongbyon nuclear plant will produce plutonium, a tested path to acquire more fissile material than a uraniumn enrichment programme.

    It was unclear how quickly the Yongbyon plant, whose cooling tower was destroyed as part of a de-nuclearisation deal, would take to restart and it was impossible to verify whether it was still connected to North Korea’s antiquated electricity grid at all.

    “It was a reactor that was nearing obsolescence with a cooling tower that wasn’t functioning properly when it was blown up. It could mean they’ve been rebuilding quite a few things,” said Yoo Ho-yeol, North Korea specialist at Korea University in Seoul.

    The move to restart the reactor comes as a big blow to China’s stated aim of restarting de-nuclearisation talks on the Korean peninsula, prompting a foreign ministry spokesman in Beijing to express regret at the decision.

    As well as restarting the 5MW reactor at Yongbyon, the North’s only known source of plutonium for its nuclear weapons programme, KCNA said a uranium enrichment plant would also be put back into operation.

    The nuclear plant’s output would be used to solve what KCNA termed an “acute shortage of electricity” and to bolster “the nuclear armed force”.

    After being hit with U.S. sanctions for conducting the February nuclear test and what it has viewed as “hostile” military drills being staged by Seoul and Washington in the South, Pyongyang had threatened a nuclear strike on the U.S., missile strikes on its Pacific bases and war with South Korea.

    Washington, which has said it has not seen any evidence of hostile North Korean troop moves, deployed a warship off the Korean coast overnight.

    The U.S. earlier bolstered forces staging joint drills with South Korea with Stealth fighters and has made bomber overflights in a rare show of strength.

    Much of the rhetoric that has come from Pyongyang in recent weeks has been a repeat of previous bouts of anger, but the length and intensity has been new, leading to concerns that the tensions could spiral into clashes.

    In Washington, the White House has said the U.S.takes North Korea’s war threats seriously.

    However, the White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Monday: “I would note that in spite of the harsh rhetoric we are hearing from Pyongyang, we are not seeing changes to the North Korean military posture, such as large-scale mobilisations and positioning of forces.”

    A U.S. defence official said on Monday the USS McCain, an Aegis-class guided-missile destroyer used for ballistic missile defense, was positioned off the peninsula’s southwestern coast.

    It was not immediately clear where the ship was on Tuesday.

    In Pyongyang, the party congress meeting and a subsequent assembly of the country’s rubber-stamp parliament reiterated the usual anti-American rhetoric and criticised South Korea, but the mood appeared to have changed.

    The pariah state has once again started emphasising economic development as it shifts to the major April 15 celebration of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung, the grandfather of the current ruler.

    For the young Kim, it appears that cementing control of the party and state had now taken top priority as well as improving living standards in a country whose economy is smaller than it was 20 years ago, according to external assessments.

    Kim appointed a handful of personal confidants to the party’s politburo, further consolidating his grip on power in the second full year of his reign.

    Former premier Pak Pong-ju, a key ally of the leadership dynasty, was re-appointed to the post from which he was fired in 2007 for failing to implement economic reforms.

    Pak, believed to be in his 70s, is viewed as a key confidant of Jang Song-thaek, the young Kim’s uncle and also a protege of Kim’s aunt. Pak is viewed as a pawn in a power game that has seen Jang and his wife re-assert power over military leaders.