North Korea says Australia’s submarine deal could trigger ‘nuclear arms race
North Korea on Monday condemned a new
defense pact by the United States, Australia and Britain, and a plan to share
nuclear submarine technology with Australia, saying the deal could trigger a
nuclear arms race and upset the balance in the Asia-Pacific region.
The Biden administration announced the
three-nation pact, called AUKUS, on Wednesday. The surprise decision to share
sensitive nuclear submarine technology with Australia has already prompted a
swift backlash from China — the apparent target of the pact — and set off a
diplomatic spat with France by scuttling an earlier deal in which Australia
would have purchased 12 French diesel-powered submarines.
These are extremely undesirable and
dangerous acts which will upset the strategic balance in the Asia-Pacific
region and trigger off a chain of nuclear arms race,” North Korean state news
media Korean Central News Agency quoted a Foreign Ministry official as saying.
“It is quite natural that neighboring
countries including China condemned these actions as irresponsible ones of
destroying the peace and stability of the region and the international nuclear
nonproliferation system and of catalyzing the arms race,” the official added.
The North Korean condemnation comes just
days after Pyongyang test-fired a pair of ballistic missiles and a new
long-range cruise missile, stoking tensions in the first public testing
activity in months amid a prolonged deadlock in nuclear talks with Washington.
North Korea has so far not responded to outreach efforts by the Biden
administration.
State media reported that North Korea
developed the cruise missiles over two years, fulfilling key defense goals set
by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un — a claim that hinted at the possible
nuclear capability of the missiles. KCNA described the missiles as a “strategic
weapon of great significance.”
South and North Korea have both been
developing increasingly sophisticated weapons amid stalled efforts to ease
tension on the peninsula. South Korea tested a submarine-launched ballistic
missile on Wednesday. In a commentary published Monday by state media, the chief
of a North Korean military think tank, Jang Chang Ha, derided the South’s
effort as “clumsy.”
In a statement on its defense plans last
week, South Korea said that “the military will work to ensure security and
peace on the Korean Peninsula by achieving powerful deterrence capabilities
through the development of missiles that are stronger, and can go further and
with more precision.”
Responding to news of the trilateral
security pact on Monday, the unnamed North Korean ministry official described
the United States as “the chief culprit toppling the international nuclear
nonproliferation system,” adding that its “double-dealing attitude” was
threatening “world peace and stability.”
The official said that North Korea will
“certainly take a corresponding counteraction in case it has even a little
adverse impact on the security of our country.”
Australia said last week it has “no plans
to acquire nuclear weapons” and that the submarine proposal will “remain
consistent with Australia’s long-standing commitment to nuclear
non-proliferation” — a global stance Prime Minister Scott Morrison said all
three nations are committed to upholding.