U.S. Urged to Adopt Policy of Peaceful Co-Existence with DPRK
Korean Central News Agency of DPRK
Pyongyang, January 16 (KCNA) -- The situation on the Korean Peninsula is so tense at present that a war may break out any moment. This is entirely
attributable to the U.S. vicious policy and moves for aggression to stifle the DPRK by force of arms, notes Rodong Sinmun Sunday in a signed article.
The article refers in detail to the fact the U.S. worked out such scenarios for armed invasion of the DPRK as the "new OPLAN 5026," "OPLAN 5027-04" and "5055" and has already put them into concrete forms. It staged at least 100 joint military exercises with Japan and south Korea every year.
The U.S. imperialists have massively shipped latest war equipment into south Korea and areas around it under the pretext of filling up the "combat forces gap" and "security gap" caused by the implementation of their plan for the redeployment of their forces, the article notes and goes on :
Huge armed forces of the U.S. and south Korea are now deployed in the areas near the Military Demarcation Line to be ready to mount a preemptive attack on the DPRK any time. "Aegis" destroyers of the U.S. 7th Fleet deployed in the East Sea of Korea are now performing their operational duty. The strategic and tactical air force in Okinawa, Guam and other areas has been massively beefed up to strike the DPRK.
Through the "reduction" and redeployment of their forces the U.S. imperialists seek to effectively use Japan as a base for air strike and naval operation, rendezvous of U.S. ground force and a logistic base for fighting a war against the DPRK. Their espionage against the DPRK has been escalated.
The U.S. oft-repeated talk that "it has no intention to mount a military attack on north Korea but wishes to seek a negotiated solution to the nuclear issue" is nothing but a camouflaged peace offensive to further step up its preparations for the second Korean war behind the curtain of "peace and dialogue" and disarm the army and people of the DPRK ideologically and morally.
The U.S. would be well advised to cogitate about the disastrous consequences to be entailed by its start of the second Korean war and make a policy switchover from a hostile policy to a policy of peaceful
co-existence.
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