Sister is strong in North Korean leader Kim Jong-un angry rejects the offer of North Korea’s economic assistance in return for denuclearization as “absurdity” and rejects the possibility of face-to-face talks. The statement appeared a few days after the South Korean President, Yoon Suk-Yeol, submitted a “brave” assistance plan that would include food, energy and infrastructure assistance as a reward for North who left his nuclear weapons program.
In a comment published in the official Rodong Sinmun newspaper in the North Korean edition, Kim Yo-jong said his country did not intend to surrender his weapon in return for economic assistance. “No one collects his destiny for corn cakes,” he said, according to the official KCNA news agency
Analysts previously said Pyongyang’s chances of accepting Yoon’s offer – first -first drifted during his inauguration speech in May – very slim. North Korea, who invested most of the GDP to develop its nuclear arsenal, had long made it clearly not to make the trade. Kim, who oversees inter-Korean affairs and is a close belief person, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, questioned Yoon’s sincerity in calling for an increase in cross-border ties even when South Korea continued to take part in the military together with the military together with the military together Together with the military together with the military together with the military together with the military together together together together together with the military together with the US and failed to prevent activists from the propaganda leaflet floating across the armed borders of the countries.
He said the nuclear weapons barter for economic cooperation “was a big dream, hope and Yoon’s plan”, which he called “simple and still childish”, according to KCNA. “We explain that we will not sit facing him,” he added. In a speech broadcast nationally on Monday to mark his first 100 days in the office, Yoon offers massive assistance in food and health care and helps modernize the capacity of power plants, ports and airports. But the proposal is not dramatically different from the previous offer rejected by Kim Jong-un, who considers his nuclear weapons as a key for the survival of his regime
North Korea has conducted a number of weapons tests this year, including firing intercontinental ballistic missiles at full speed for the first time since 2017. Tension is expected to increase next week when the US and South Korea began their biggest joint military training over the years. The allies insisting the exercise is defensive, but the north views them as exercises for invasion and have responded with missile tests in the past. US and South Korean officials for weeks have warned that the North is preparing to do what will be the seventh nuclear test.
Last week, North Korea threatened to “remove” Seoul’s authority over the Covid-19 outbreak recently less than a month after Kim Jong-un said his country “was ready to mobilize” his nuclear ability in any war with the US and South. Speaking for hours after North Korea fired two cruising missiles into the sea on Wednesday, Yoon said the southern did not have a plan to pursue its own nuclear prevention in facing an increasingly greater threat from his neighbors, added that he did not want to see the changes in the forced regime forced the regime forcibly regime in the north.
Analysts said North Korea could not accept proposals from the south as long as they resembled in recent years. “Yoon’s initiative added a long list of failure offers involving the promises of South Korea to provide economic benefits to North Korea,” Scott Snyder, a senior colleague at the Think Tank of the Council of Foreign Relations, in a blog post.