North Korea says its status as a nuclear weapons state can never be reversed: KCNA

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

A North Korean flag flutters at the propaganda village of Gijungdong in North Korea, in this picture taken near the truce village of Panmunjom inside the demilitarized zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas, South Korea, July 19, 2022.    REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/Pool/File Photo

North Korea is believed to have developed an arsenal of nuclear weapons, although it has not conducted an atmospheric nuclear test.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:

- North Korea’s status as a nuclear weapons state can never be reversed, no matter how much the United States and its Asian allies demand it, state media reported on April 9, citing the powerful sister of the country’s supreme leader.

The comments, which state news agency KCNA said were issued on April 8, were likely a response to a joint statement made by the foreign ministers of South Korea, Japan and the US on the sidelines of a Nato meeting last week.

The three foreign ministers reaffirmed their “commitment to the complete denuclearisation” of North Korea, according to the joint statement.

The position of the North’s nuclear weapons state, together with its “substantial and very strong nuclear deterrent”, is a result of outside hostile threat and “it does not change, no matter how desperately anyone denies”, said Ms Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, according to KCNA.

“We don’t care about anyone’s denial and recognition, and we never change our option,” she said. “This is our steadfast choice that can never be reversed by any physical strength or sly artifice.”

North Korea has pursued nuclear weapons despite sanctions by the UN Security Council over the years since it first conducted an underground nuclear detonation test in 2006.

Since then, it is believed to have developed an arsenal of nuclear weapons, although it has not conducted an atmospheric nuclear test.

It has been a longstanding policy of Washington and its Asian allies to completely dismantle the North's nuclear programme, but analysts believe Pyongyang has gone beyond the point of agreeing to any deal to achieve that.

US President Donald Trump has called the North a “nuclear power” and has suggested that he would again sit down with Mr Kim, with whom he had unprecedented summit meetings during his first term trying to ease security tensions. REUTERS

See more on