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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

SLUG: 2-299285 North Korea / Threats
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=02/06/03

TYPE=NORTH KOREA THREATS (L)

NUMBER=2-299285

BYLINE=AMY BICKERS

DATELINE=TOKYO

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: North Korea stepped up its war of words with the United States

Thursday, warning that any pre-emptive attack on the North's nuclear

facilities would trigger a "full-scale war". As V-O-A's Amy Bickers

reports, the comments came as Washington considers increasing its

military strength in the Far East in reaction to North Korea's nuclear

weapons program.

TEXT: Pyongyang pledges to react to any U-S strike on its nuclear

facilities with "merciless retaliation" and vows to respond to war with

"total war."

That warning was made in a commentary carried in North Korea's main

newspaper and aired on Radio Pyongyang, according to South Korea's

Yonhap news agency.

A North Korean Foreign Ministry official made similar comments to

British journalists from the B-B-C and Guardian newspaper who are

visiting Pyongyang. Ri Pyong-gap, the ministry's deputy director,

reportedly told the journalists that a decision by Washington to

increase its presence on the Korean Peninsula could lead Pyongyang to

launch a pre-emptive attack on U-S forces. Mr. Ri said pre-emptive

attacks are not the exclusive right of the United States.

U-S defense officials said Tuesday they are considering sending

reinforcements and additional equipment to American military forces in

the Pacific as a warning to Pyongyang. But the Washington denies it is

planning any attack on North Korea.

The North's warnings came one day after it claimed to have restarted its

Yongbyon nuclear power plant, which can produce plutonium for nuclear

bombs. The plant was deactivated under a 1994 pact with the United

States that has since collapsed. Under that agreement, a group led by

the United States was providing energy aid to the North, while Pyongyang

pledged to suspend its nuclear weapons program.

Washington and its allies stopped fuel shipments to the North in

December, after Washington revealed that Pyongyang had continued a

weapons development program in violation of the 1994 accord. Shortly

after that, the North began moving toward reactivating the plant, and

expelled United Nations nuclear inspectors.

Pyongyang says it restarted the reactor only to provide electricity for

its energy-starved nation, but nuclear experts say the reactor is too

small to generate significant amounts of electricity. American

officials have called the move "blackmail".

In Washington, U-S Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Wednesday that

restarting the nuclear program would give the North a troubling option

-- making nuclear weapons for itself, or selling them to another country

or group. He said that is something the world must take very seriously.

He also said that the North was mistaken if it felt it could exploit the

U-S preoccupation with Iraq.

Hideya Kurata, a North Korea specialist at Japan's Kyorin University,

says the latest moves represent escalating brinkmanship.

/// KURATA ACT IN JAPANESE, FADE /// 38u

He says this situation between the United States and North Korea has

been developing for months. He adds that he thinks the two nations'

holding talks could be beneficial.

Both countries have expressed a willingness to talk, but so far no

meeting has been arranged. Pyongyang has repeatedly demanded the United

States sign a mutual non-aggression pact, but Washington has rejected

that idea. (SIGNED)

NEB/HK/AB/BK