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N. Korea criticises US aid suspension, warns on deal
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) March 31, 2012


North Korea on Saturday criticised the US suspension of food aid over its planned rocket launch as an "overreaction", warning it would render last month's deal on a nuclear freeze null and void.

"The U.S. overreaction to the DPRK (North Korea's) plan... has gone beyond the limit," a foreign ministry spokesman said, according to the North's official news agency KCNA.

He said that Washington had previously insisted that it made no link between humanitarian and political issues.

But it had responded to the "planned satellite launch with the announcement to stop following through on its commitment to food aid," the spokesman continued.

"This would be a regrettable act of scrapping the DPRK-U.S. agreement in its entirety as it is a violation of the core articles of the February 29 DPRK-U.S. agreement."

The United States announced Wednesday that it had suspended plans to send food aid to the nuclear-armed North as it had broken a promise to halt missile launches and could not be trusted to give the help to those who needed it.

A Pentagon official said the US had "no confidence" that it was possible "to ensure that the food assistance goes to the starving people and not the regime elite".

Under the US-North Korea deal, the impoverished North had agreed to a partial nuclear freeze and a missile test moratorium in return for 240,000 tonnes of US food aid.

But not long after it was agreed, the North announced it planned to launch a satellite between April 12-16 to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of founding president Kim Il-Sung.

The United States and other countries say it would in fact be a long-range missile test banned under UN resolutions.

"This planned launch is highly provocative because it manifests North Korea's desire to test and expand its long-range missile capability," said Peter Lavoy, acting assistant secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific affairs, on Wednesday.

During discussions with the North, the US had made it "very clear" that a satellite launch would be a "deal breaker", he said.

In Saturday's statement, the foreign ministry spokesman said that the North was yet to make its mind up about its final response to the US suspension of food aid, and urged Washington to reconsider the move.

"(North Korea) just hopes that the U.S. would courageously accept peaceful satellite launch by a sovereign state, though belatedly, and prove in practice its words that it has no hostility toward the DPRK," he said.

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US stands by Japan over N.Korea
Washington (AFP) March 30, 2012 - The United States on Friday voiced support for ally Japan after the officially pacifist country said it would shoot down a North Korean rocket if the planned launch poses a threat.

State Department spokesman Mark Toner dismissed a question on whether Japan's statement would aggravate the situation, saying: "Let's be very clear -- it's the intentions stated by North Korea that are elevating tensions."

"We consult extremely closely with Japan and with our other allies in the region," Toner told reporters.

"We're certainly understanding of their concerns, which is why we've been so vocal about... telling North Korea that this planned launch is a mistake, that they should back away from it, and that it's jeopardizing the Leap Year agreement," Toner said.

He was referring to an agreement announced on February 29 under which North Korea said it would freeze nuclear and missile tests and the United States offered food aid for the impoverished communist state.

With the ink barely dry, North Korea announced it would launch a "satellite" between April 12 and 16 to mark the 100th anniversary of the birth of founding president Kim Il-Sung.

Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda's cabinet on Friday gave the green light for Japanese forces to shoot down the rocket if it threatens the country's territory.

Japan has never fired a shot in anger since World War II, when the United States forces the defeated country to renounce the right to wage war. Some 47,000 troops are stationed in Japan under a security alliance.

North Korea in 1998 stunned the world by firing a rocket over Japan's main island of Honshu into the Pacific Ocean. It also tested long-range missiles in 2006 and 2009, but US analysts considered the launches to be failures.

If North Korea goes ahead with the latest launch, the rocket is expected to take a different route and may go near Japan's southern island of Okinawa on its way to waters near the Philippines.



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NUKEWARS
US suspends plans for food aid to NKorea: Pentagon official
Washington (AFP) March 28, 2012
The United States has suspended plans to send food aid to North Korea because it has broken a promise to halt missile launches and cannot be trusted to give the help to those who need it, a Pentagon official said Wednesday. The United States had previously warned that any launch would jeopardize food assistance, but the official's comments at a congressional hearing marked a tougher stance a ... read more


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