Tuesday, February 5, 2013

North Korea threatens "stronger" measures than nuclear test

NO REASON TO BE ALARMED "OBAMA IS DRIVING OUR BUS"
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (C) presides over a consultative meeting with officials about state security and foreign affairs in this undated recent picture released by North Korea's official KCNA news agency in Pyongyang on January 27, 2013. REUTERS/KCNA
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SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea stepped up its bellicose rhetoric on Tuesday, threatening to go beyond carrying out a promised third nuclear test in response to what it believes are "hostile" sanctions imposed after a December rocket launch.
Pyongyang frequently employs fiery rhetoric aimed at South Korea and the United States and in 2010 was blamed for sinking a South Korean naval vessel. It also shelled a South Korean island in the same year, killing civilians.
It did not spell out the actions it would take. North Korea is not capable of staging a military strike on the United States, although South Korea is in range of its artillery and missiles and Japan of its missiles.
"The DPRK (Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea, or North Korea) has drawn a final conclusion that it will have to take a measure stronger than a nuclear test to cope with the hostile forces' nuclear-war moves that have become ever more undisguised," the North's KCNA state news agency said.
The United States and South Korea are staging military drills that North Korea says are a rehearsal for an invasion, something both Washington and Seoul deny.
New U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry discussed North Korea in "remarkably similar" telephone conversations with his counterparts from Japan, South Korea and China, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.