North Korea on Saturday accused the Biden administration of raising military tensions with China through its ârecklessâ backing of Taiwan, and said that the growing U.S. military presence in the region constitutes a potential threat to the North.
In comments carried by state media, North Korea Vice Foreign Minister Pak Myong Ho criticized the United States for sending warships through the Taiwan Strait and providing Taiwan with upgraded weapons systems and military training.
The United Statesâ âindiscreet meddlingâ in issues regarding Taiwan, which the North sees as entirely a Chinese internal affair, threatens to touch off a âdelicate situation on the Korean Peninsula.â
Pakâs statement came a day after President Joe Biden told a CNN townhall event that the United States was committed to coming to Taiwanâs defense if it comes under attack from China. While that seemed to blur Washingtonâs long-held stance of maintaining âstrategic ambiguityâ on whether it would intervene if China were to attack Taiwan, White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Biden had no intent to convey a change in policy.
China and Taiwan split amid civil war in 1949, and although it maintains formal diplomatic relations only with Beijing, the U.S. remains committed by law to ensure Taiwan can defend itself from outside threats.
North Korea has increasingly criticized the United Statesâ broader security role in the Asia Pacific amid an intensifying competition with China, Pyongyangâs major ally and economic lifeline. Last month, the North threatened unspecified countermeasures following the Biden administrationâs decision to provide nuclear-powered submarines to Australia.
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âIt is a well-known fact that the U.S. troops and its military bases in (South Korea) are in use to put pressure on China and that the huge forces of the U.S. and its satellite states, which are being concentrated near Taiwan, can be committed to a military operation targeting the DPRK at any time,â Pak said, using an abbreviation of the Northâs formal name, the Democratic Peopleâs Republic of Korea.
He said the increasing military presence of U.S.-led âhostile forcesâ in the region was based on a âlame assertionâ that North Korea and China would cause trouble in Taiwan and the Korean Peninsula.
âThis reality proves that the U.S. is in its bid to stifle our country and China, both socialist countries, in order to hold on to its supremacy,â Pak said.
Nuclear negotiations between Washington and Pyongyang have stalled for more than two years over the issue of relaxing crippling U.S.-led sanctions against North Korea in return for steps by the North to wind-down its nuclear weapons program.
Pyongyang sees the possession of nuclear weapons as the ultimate guarantor of the survival of the Kim family regime that has run the country with an iron fist since the 1940s.
Ending a months-long lull in September, North Korea has been ramping up its missile tests while making conditional peace offers to Seoul, reviving a pattern of pressuring South Korea to try to get what it wants from the United States.
Sung Kim, Bidenâs special envoy for North Korea, was expected to arrive in South Korea later on Saturday for talks with allies on reviving negotiations with the North.
The Biden administration's pullout from Afghanistan underscored a broader shift in U.S. focus away from counterterrorism and so-called rogue states like North Korea and Iran. That is putting the focus on confronting a near-peer adversary in China, and part of that apparent strategy appear to be offering the North a resumption of talks without preconditions.
But the North has so far rejected the idea of open-ended talks, saying that Washington must abandon its âhostile policy,â a term North Korea mainly refers to sanctions and U.S.-South Korea joint military exercises.