Pyongyang, May 25 (KCNA) -- The U.S. which has imposed misfortune and
pain upon the Korean people for the last several decades should roll
back its anachronistic hostile policy toward the DPRK which ranked
itself among the advanced nuclear powers, facing up to the latter's
strategic position and the trend of the times.
The Policy Department of the National Defence Commission (NDC) of the DPRK demanded this in a statement issued on Wednesday.
The above-said principled stand of the DPRK represents the thunder
of justice heralding the final ruin of the U.S. and the final warning by
Songun Korea, it noted, and went on:
The U.S. is not aware of its impending miserable end, still seized with an anachronistic Cold War-minded way of thinking.
Odd views that in any case it is impossible to change the principle
of "north Korea's denuclearization first and halt to the pressure on it
next" are heard from the U.S. political camp including the White House
to mislead the public opinion. And a litany of such provocative
invectives that "a switchover in the U.S. government's policy towards
north Korea entirely hinges on its changes" is reeled off.
The warmongers of the Pentagon are openly talking about their plan
to stage the U.S.-Japan-south Korea joint drills under the simulated
conditions of an actual war for coping with the "threat" from the DPRK's
ballistic missiles for the first time in history as part of the
scheduled large-scale RIMPAC exercises.
The cunning U.S. is taking such double-dealing attitude as hurling
the U.S. imperialist aggressor troops present in south Korea under the
mask of "UN force" into the Military Demarcation Line in Panmunjom for
the farce of "informing" over loudspeaker the KPA side of its wish to
restore the severed DPRK-U.S. military hotline and resume contact,
afraid of punishment in case it turns down the DPRK's principled demand.
The statement clarified once again that the hostile policy
persistently pursued by the U.S. towards the DPRK is a product of its
anachronistic and unreasonable one lacking understanding and
self-ruinous policy.
The first reason is that the above-said policy is a product of the
anachronistic dream as it is insisting on its unilateral brigandish
demand, disregarding the changed reality and the trend of the times.
Early in the 1950s, the U.S. invaded the north, brandishing A-bomb
against rifle but it is standing against the irresistible entity
possessed of even tremendous H-bomb called "absolute weapon" on our
planet at present.
Tragedy is that the U.S. is ignoring not only the changed reality but the trend of the times.
The longer the U.S. is carried away by the hallucination of
aggression and war, disregarding the worldwide trend, and the more
reckless moves it pursues to isolate and stifle the DPRK, the bitterer
disgrace it will suffer and the dearer price it will have to pay.
The second reason is that the U.S. hostile policy toward the DPRK is
a product of ignorance based on the theory of the jungle law bereft of
any elementary understanding of its rival.
The DPRK-U.S. confrontation has lasted for 71 years amid an extreme hostility.
But the U.S. hostile policy toward the DPRK remains unchanged as it
has been consistently pursued by the most hostile and outrageous
methods.
The U.S would be well advised to realize that it is the best way of
escaping the nightmare and misfortune to properly understand who its
rival is, though belatedly, recognize the reality, though painful, and
reshape its foolish Korea policy.
The third reason is that the U.S. hostile policy toward the DPRK is a
product of a self-ruinous policy as it only precipitates its most
miserable final doom by itself.
The history of the DPRK-U.S. confrontation clearly records the
immutable law that certain victory is the tradition of Songun Korea and
the brigandish U.S. is fated to sustain a defeat.
The U.S. should foresee what the DPRK-U.S. relations will be in
future in case it insists on its hostile policy toward the DPRK in the
light of the past and present realities.
For the U.S. to roll back its anachronistic hostile policy toward
the DPRK as early as possible, though belatedly, would only offer it an
opportunity of escaping a miserable fate. -0-
No comments:
Post a Comment