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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

U.S. Human Rights Offensive against DPRK Assailed

Korean Central News Agency of DPRK

    Pyongyang, December 28 (KCNA) -- It is said that the United States, having worked out the "North Korean Human Rights Act" aimed at "overthrow of the political system" of the DPRK, is now planning to appoint "a special envoy in charge of north Korean human rights issue" and looking for a suitable person. Commenting on this, Rodong Sinmun Tuesday says it is the hackneyed method of the U.S. to politicize the "human rights problem" and, resorting to practices of option and double standard, exploit it in justifying its aggression, war, overthrow of political systems and change of regimes in anti-U.S. independent countries. This can be said of the "North Korean Human Rights Act" it cooked up recently, notes the analyst, and goes on:
    Sensing it hopeless to realize its scheme and stratagem to totally disarm the DPRK by forcing it to "renounce its nuclear program first," the U.S. is now going to try its luck in "overthrowing the regime" of the DPRK and "destroying its political system" with "human rights" and "democracy" as the expedient. The "North Korean Human Rights Act" coined by it as it pleased under the cloak of "improving human rights in north Korea" is an offspring of this move. This is another undisguised political provocation against the DPRK to drive the socialist system, the life and soul of the Korean people, to a collapse at any cost with the "human rights problem" as well as the "nuclear issue" as its two-pronged javelin.
    Unshakable is the principled stand of the DPRK to answer the reactionary human rights offensive of the U.S. with a revolutionary one, and its "strength" with strength. Today when the U.S. stand and policy to isolate and stifle the DPRK, refusing the Korean style idea and system and peaceful co-existence with it, is getting all the clearer, the confidence and will of the Korean People's Army and people to firmly defend the country's sovereignty and socialism with a mighty self-defensive deterrent force is becoming stronger and their hatred for the U.S. is burning fiercer a thousand fold.
    The U.S. would be well advised to formulate a stand for a policy change, dropping its fantastic dream of stifling the DPRK with the "nuclear issue" and the "human rights problem" as its two-pronged javelin.



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