25-04-2024 08:54 PM Jerusalem Timing

Top US Diplomat from Seoul Calls for more Pressure on Pyongyang

Top US Diplomat from Seoul Calls for more Pressure on Pyongyang

New US Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for more pressure on Pyongyang as he held talks Monday in Seoul that focused on North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs.

New US Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for more pressure on Pyongyang as he held talks Monday in Seoul that focused on North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.

Blinken's arrival in South Korea was presaged by a series of North Korean missile tests, reflecting escalating military tensions on the divided peninsula ahead of large-scale US-South Korea military drills next month.Blinken with South Korea's Vice FM

Following talks with his South Korean counterpart Cho Tae-Yong, Blinken argued that international sanctions on North Korea had made a "meaningful difference" to its ability to acquire materials for its weapons and missiles programs.

North Korea is already subject to a raft of US and UN sanctions over its arms program, but some critics insist the measures have failed to stop Pyongyang pushing ahead with its nuclear and missile development.

President Barack Obama imposed fresh sanctions last month following a damaging cyber attack on Hollywood studio Sony Pictures that Washington blamed on Pyongyang.

And US lawmakers introduced legislation last week that would widen sanctions by imposing harsher penalties on foreign companies doing business with Pyongyang.

Kicking off a three-nation tour that will also take him to China and Japan, Blinken said the US was still open to negotiating with the North, but only if it showed a tangible “commitment to denuclearization.”

"And until the North Koreans demonstrate that they are serious, it is important to sustain the pressure on them," he said.

The North test-fired five short-range missiles into the sea as Blinken arrived in Seoul on Sunday, and the day before it had trumpeted the test of a new "ultra-precision" anti-ship cruise missile under the watchful eye of leader Kim Jong-Un.

Next month sees the launch of annual joint exercises by the US and South Korean military, which regularly see North-South relations go into a vertiginous tail-spin.