Japan Urged to Drop Its Hostile Policy toward DPRK
Korean Central News Agency of DPRK via Korea News Service (KNS)
Pyongyang, October 14 (KCNA) -- The DPRK-Japan relations keep deteriorating and the Japanese reactionaries' moves to isolate and stifle the DPRK have reached their extremes in recent years, says Rodong Sinmun Friday in a signed article. The Japanese reactionaries' ever-more undisguised hostile policy toward the DPRK is an indication of a criminal policy based on their militarist view on aggression aimed at realizing their ambition for reinvasion at any cost, the article says, and goes on:
The Japanese reactionaries are frantically stepping up the preparations to stage a comeback to Korea although 60 years have passed since the defeat of the Japanese imperialists. Their moves to emerge a military giant keen on overseas expansion arouse big apprehension and uneasiness among people in Asia and other parts of the world for their aggressive and dangerous nature.
They are desperately pushing forward the arms build-up and the retrogressive revision of the constitution behind the scene while raising a hue and cry over "military threat from north Korea."
These moves of Japan to become a military power and institute wartime laws are part of its moves to round off the preparations to reinvade the DPRK. The Japanese reactionaries claim that Japan may fight a war against north Korea and it would strike the heart of north Korea while amassing major units of the "Self-defence Forces" in western areas of the country close to Korea. This is little short of a declaration to mount a preemptive attack on the DPRK and a military provocation. Japan's moves to grab Tok Islet have something in common with this and therefore they can be interpreted as a prelude to its reinvasion of Korea.
Japan is working with bloodshot eyes to revive its colonial domination over Korea. The Japanese reactionaries' stepped up moves for reinvasion will only accelerate their isolation and destruction. The Japanese reactionaries should bear this in mind and roll back their hostile policy toward the DPRK and drop the ambition for invasion.
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