Thursday 7 November 2019

Japanese PM Condemned for Taking Issue with DPRK's Test-Fire of Super-large Multiple Rocket Launchers

Pyongyang, November 7 (KCNA) -- Song Il Ho, ambassador of the Foreign Ministry of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, made public the following statement on Thursday:

A fool remains as it is till his doom's day and a rogue cannot be converted forever.

Abe, prime minister of Japan, is an idiot and villain as he is making fuss as if a nuclear bomb was dropped on the land of Japan, taking issue with the DPRK's test-fire of super-large multiple rocket launchers.

Abe is letting out a string of ill-intended remarks that the DPRK's test-fire of super-large multiple rocket launchers is the ballistic missile launch and a threat to Japan.

Moreover, he impudently said at the ASEAN summit that north Korea's launch of missile is a wanton violation of the UN resolution and the international community should turn out in the north's denuclearization.

It is very shameless for him, who had repeatedly said that the DPRK's recent successive self-defensive measures "have no effect on security of Japan," to talk such rubbish as ballistic missiles and violation of the UN resolution.

Abe is a base politician as he lays bare his nature following the trend of times.

Abe is also a rarely ignorant man who dreams of making Japan a military power, failing to distinguish between multiple rocket launchers and missiles, and he is an under-wit as he is only able to say such crude words as "provocation," "outrage," "violation," "abduction," and "pressure."

He is, indeed, a deformed child.

As such a base, rude and immoral man is the prime minister of Japan, it is censured as "politically small nation," "sinking island country" and "gloomy, desolate country" by the world.

It is too natural that Abe is treated as a poor dog and dwarf that fails to enter the international political arena with the Korean Peninsula as a center.

Anyone can not help laughing at Abe as he is carefully knocking the door of Pyongyang, calling for "no-strings-attached talks".

Abe would be well-advised not to dream forever of crossing the threshold of Pyongyang as he hurled a torrent of abuse at the just measures of the DPRK for self-defense.

Not many years have elapsed since peace settled in the sky above Japan.

If the dwarfs persist in provoking the DPRK, longing for the uneasiness and horror with which they trembled when something flew over Japan, the DPRK will do what it wishes to do, indifferent to the island nation.

Japan had better know well that it will face a more serious disaster and ruin if it keeps on running reckless, failing to know itself. -0-

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