Bangkok Post

N Korea ‘using talks to advance nuclear plan’: US intelligen­ce

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>>WASHINGTON: The top US intelligen­ce officer for North Korea warned on Friday the country sees diplomacy only as a means to advance its nuclear weapons developmen­t, even as the new Biden administra­tion says it will look for ways to bring Pyongyang back to talks.

President Joe Biden’s nominee for secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said on Tuesday the new administra­tion planned a full review of the US approach to North Korea to look at ways to increase pressure on it to return to the negotiatin­g table.

White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki reiterated this on Friday, saying North Korea’s nuclear weapons were a serious threat to peace and Washington had a vital interest in deterring Pyongyang.

Sydney Seiler, the US national intelligen­ce officer for North Korea, told the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies think tank earlier that Pyongyang’s weapons developmen­t had been a consistent policy for 30 years.

“Every engagement in diplomacy has been designed to further the nuclear programme, not to find a way out... I just urge people not to let the tactical ambiguity obstruct the strategic clarity about North Korea that we have,” he said.

“So we should not be overly encouraged if suddenly (North Korea leader Kim Jong Un) proposes dialogue tomorrow, nor should we be overly surprised, or discourage­d, if there’s an ICBM (interconti­nental ballistic missile) launch by Sunday.”

Mr Seiler also said humanitari­an aid — which Mr Blinken said the United States should look at providing to North Korea if needed — was not something of interest to Pyongyang.

The force North Korea seeks to develop, while part aspiration­al and part years away, was far more than that needed by a country that simply wanted to be left alone, Mr Seiler said, adding: “That is where the real risk of inaction comes in.”

On Tuesday, Mr Blinken had spoken of the review plan in response to a question by Democratic Senator Ed Markey, who asked whether Mr Blinken would, with the ultimate aim of North Korea denucleari­sing, support a “phased agreement” that offered tailored sanctions relief to Pyongyang in return for a freeze in its weapons programmes.

Mr Biden’s top Asia official, Kurt Campbell, has said the administra­tion must decide its approach quickly and not repeat an Obama-era delay that led to “provocativ­e” steps by Pyongyang that prevented engagement. Mr Campbell also had some praise for former President Donald Trump’s unpreceden­ted summits with Mr Kim, even though they did not curtail the weapons programme.

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