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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

U.S. Hostile Policy toward DPRK Will Never Succeed

Korean Central News Agency of DPRK

    Pyongyang, December 17 (KCNA) -- The effective Songun policy and toughest counter-measures of the DPRK have frustrated the U.S. frantic moves to bring it to its knees and stifle it through high-handed pressure and nuclear blackmail, observes Rodong Sinmun Friday in a signed article. It goes on:
    This year the U.S. has worked hard to isolate and stifle the DPRK by charging it with nuclear development only to disclose its true colors as the very one responsible for the destruction of the groundwork of the six-party talks.
    The Bush group let loose a string of sheer rubbish that the DPRK violated its commitments concerning the nuclear issue and unilaterally pressurized it to move first to scrap its nuclear program, a brigandish demand the DPRK can never accept, while shelving the issue of making a switchover in its hostile policy toward the DPRK.
    It was the U.S. which overturned the basic groundwork of the six-party talks and applied double standards in dealing with the nuclear issue, thus putting the six-party talks in a stalemate and making the prospect of the solution to the nuclear issue dim. Yet it has resorted to a despicable trick to twist the nature of the issue while shifting the blame for such deadlock onto the DPRK side.
    The clandestine nuclear-related experiments disclosed in south Korea this year clearly prove what a serious extent the U.S. prejudiced double standards concerning the nuclear issue have reached.
    What is more serious is that the U.S. has undisguisedly worked to realize international blockade against the DPRK by plugging other countries into it.
    The U.S. expected the DPRK to change its principled stand and yield to the U.S., scared by its international cooperation and blockade against the DPRK.
    This year the .U.S. imperialists faked up the "North Korean Human Rights Act" under the pretext of the fictitious human rights issue in the DPRK.
    This year they have left no means and methods untried to isolate and stifle the DPRK but their moves suffered a failure and setback in face of the DPRK's policy of toughest countermeasure based on its powerful military deterrent force.
    The situation on the Korean Peninsula this year again teaches the lesson that the U.S. does not seek a solution to the nuclear issue and the establishment of peaceful relations between the two countries and it is, therefore, necessary to fight against it with arms to the last.
    The U.S. would be well advised to draw a lesson from the trend of the situation on the peninsula this year and opt for making a switchover in its hostile policy toward the DPRK and peacefully co-existing with it.



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