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Kim Yo-jong is widely considered North Korea’s second most powerful person after her brother, supreme leader Kim Jong-un. Photo: AFP

US ‘barking dog seized with fear’ will face ‘fatal security crisis’, sister of North Korea’s Kim warns

  • Kim Yo-jong’s warning came hours after what she called a ‘disgusting’ US-led statement condemning Pyongyang’s missile launches at the UN
  • Washington ‘can never deprive’ North Korea of its ‘right to self defence’, said the influential sister of the reclusive country’s supreme leader
North Korea
The influential sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has warned the United States it will face “a more fatal security crisis” as Washington pushes for UN condemnation of the North’s recent intercontinental ballistic missile test.
Kim Yo-jong’s warning came hours after US Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council on Tuesday that the US will circulate a proposed presidential statement condemning North Korea’s banned missile launches and other destabilising activities.

After the meeting, Thomas-Greenfield also read a statement by 14 countries which supported action to limit North Korea’s advancement of its weapons programmes.

Kim Yo-jong, who is widely considered North Korea’s second most powerful person after her brother, lambasted the US for issuing what she called “a disgusting joint statement together with such rabbles as Britain, France, Australia, Japan and South Korea.”

US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield (centre) makes a statement on Monday regarding North Korea on behalf of other member states after a UN Security Council meeting. Photo: AP

Kim compared the US to “a barking dog seized with fear”. She said North Korea considered the US-led statement “a wanton violation of our sovereignty and a grave political provocation”.

“The US should be mindful that no matter how desperately it may seek to disarm [North Korea], it can never deprive [our country] of its right to self-defence and that the more hell-bent it gets on the anti-[North Korea] acts, it will face a more fatal security crisis,” she said in a statement carried by state media.

Monday’s UN Security Council meeting was convened in response to North Korea’s ICBM launch on Friday, which was part of a provocative run of missile tests this year that experts say is designed to modernise its nuclear arsenal and increase its leverage in future diplomacy.

Friday’s test involved its most powerful Hwasong-17 missile, and some experts say the successful steep-angle launch proved its potential to strike anywhere in the US mainland if it was fired at a standard trajectory.

During the Security Council meeting, the US and its allies strongly criticised the ICBM launch and called for action to limit North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes.

But Russia and China, both veto-wielding members of the Security Council, opposed any new pressure and sanctions on North Korea. In May, the two countries vetoed a US-led attempt to toughen sanctions on North Korea over its earlier ballistic missile tests, which are prohibited by UN Security Council resolutions.

North Korea has said its testing activities are legitimate exercises of its right to self-defence in response to regular military drills between the US and South Korea that it views as an invasion rehearsal.

Washington and Seoul officials say the exercises are defensive in nature.

02:44

US deploys B-1B strategic bombers for joint air drill with South Korea

US deploys B-1B strategic bombers for joint air drill with South Korea

Kim Yo-jong said the fact that North Korea’s ICBM launch was discussed at the Security Council is “evidently the application of double-standards” by the UN body because it “turned blind eyes” to the US-South Korean military drills.

She said North Korea will not tolerate any attempt to undermine its right to self-defence and will take “the toughest counteraction to the last” to protect its national security.

On Monday, North Korea’s foreign minister, Choe Son-hui, called UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres “a puppet of the United States”.
There are concerns that North Korea may soon conduct its first nuclear test in five years.
The status of North Korea’s nuclear capability remains shrouded in secrecy. Some analysts say North Korea already has nuclear-armed missiles that can strike both the US mainland and its allies South Korea and Japan, but others say the North is still years away from possessing such missiles.
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