U.S. Urged to Drop Its Hostile Policy toward DPRK
Korean Central News Agency of DPRK
Pyongyang, September 28 (KCNA) -- The United States is trying to create impression that the resumption of the six-party talks was failed because of the DPRK's delaying tactics in a bid to mislead the public opinion. Blaming the U.S. for this, Minju Joson today in a signed commentary says: There is only one yardstick to measure the possibility of resuming the talks. That is the U.S. renunciation of its hostile policy toward the DPRK, a key to opening the prospect of the talks.
The purpose of the six-party talks is to seek a peaceful solution to the nuclear issue. The U.S., however, came out to the talks from their outset with an extremely hostile view that it would never co-exist with the DPRK and has maintained such a stand throughout the talks.
In the meantime, the U.S. has hatched a plot to stifle the DPRK militarily behind the scene of the dialogue, pushing the situation to a more complicated phase. These facts confirmed the DPRK's view that the U.S. dialogue strategy is nothing but a leverage to realize its policy to stifle the DPRK.
What should not be overlooked is that the U.S. applied double standards as regards the case of extraction of nuclear substance in south Korea. This proves that it is not prompted by its concern about the nuclear proliferation but by its aim to realize its ambition to stifle the DPRK.
The U.S. seems to judge that the DPRK is linking the six-party talks to the presidential election in the U.S. But it only betrays its total ignorance of the DPRK.
The commentary urges the U.S. to clarify its willingness to drop its reckless hostile policy toward the DPRK if it is truly interested in seeking a peaceful negotiated solution to the nuclear issue through the six-party talks.
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