UN envoy warns N. Korea
'miscalculation' could trigger conflict
UNITED NATIONS, United States, Dec. 10 (AFP) - A senior UN envoy warned Saturday there was a grave risk that a miscalculation could trigger conflict with North Korea as he urged Pyongyang to keep communication channels open after a rare visit to the reclusive state.
UNITED NATIONS, United States, Dec. 10 (AFP) - A senior UN envoy warned Saturday there was a grave risk that a miscalculation could trigger conflict with North Korea as he urged Pyongyang to keep communication channels open after a rare visit to the reclusive state.
Jeffrey
Feltman's trip to the North -- the first by such a high-ranking UN diplomat
since 2010 -- kicked off less than a week after Pyongyang said it test-fired a
new ballistic missile capable of reaching the US.
The
United Nations said Feltman met North Korea's Foreign Minister Ri Yong-Ho and
Vice Foreign Minister Pak Myong-Kuk and they "agreed that the current
situation was the most tense and dangerous peace and security issue in the
world today".
Noting
the "urgent need to prevent miscalculations and open channels to reduce
the risks of conflict," Feltman said the international community was
committed to finding a peaceful solution.
Feltman,
the UN's under secretary general for political affairs, also stressed the
importance of full implementation of all relevant Security Council resolutions.
The
UN Security Council has hit the isolated and impoverished North with a package
of sanctions over its increasingly powerful missile and nuclear tests, which
have rattled Washington and its regional allies South Korea and Japan.
Earlier,
North Korea's state news agency KCNA said "the US policy of hostility
toward the DPRK (North Korea) and its nuclear blackmail are to blame for the
current tense situation on the Korean peninsula".But it added the North
had agreed with the UN "to regularize communications through visits at
various levels".
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'Nuclear pre-emptive strike' -
The
KCNA report did not mention any meetings with leader Kim Jong-Un, who has
ramped up his impoverished nation's missile and nuclear program in recent years
in order to achieve Pyongyang's stated goal of developing a warhead capable of
hitting the US mainland.
Feltman's
visit also came after the United States and South Korea launched their
biggest-ever joint air exercise.
Pyongyang
reiterated its view that these manoeuvres were a provocation, accusing the
drills of "revealing its intention to mount a surprise nuclear pre-emptive
strike against the DPRK".
The
Chinese foreign ministry on Saturday published a speech from earlier in the
week by foreign minister Wang Yi in which he warned that the Korean Peninsula
"remains deeply entrenched in a vicious cycle of demonstrations of
strength and confrontation."
"The
outlook is not optimistic," Beijing's top diplomat added.Fears of a
catastrophic conflict with the nuclear-armed regime have spiked as Kim and
Donald Trump have taunted each other in recent months, with the US President
pejoratively dubbing his rival "Little Rocket Man" and a "sick
puppy".
Kim
has called the 71-year-old president a "dotard", meaning a weak or
senile old man -- an insult that was renewed Saturday as the North condemned
Trump for recognising Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
"Considering
the fact that the mentally deranged dotard openly called for a total
destruction of a sovereign state at the UN, this action is not so
surprising", KCNA quoted a foreign ministry spokesman as saying.
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