North Korea says US-South Korea deal to set off 'nuclear domino' effect


he US and South Korea released details of an agreement on Nov 14 that includes US approval for South Korea to build nuclear-powered submarines. - Reuters

SEOUL: North Korea on Tuesday (Nov 18) said South Korea's plan to build nuclear-powered submarines with US approval would trigger a "nuclear domino" effect.

On Friday, South Korea and the US jointly released the details of the agreement struck by President Lee Jae Myung and President Donald Trump at their summit last month, which included a commitment to disarm the North's nuclear arsenal.

The US also gave the green light for South Korea to build nuclear-powered attack submarines, a goal that had been long harboured by Seoul.

The agreement revealed the "true colours of the confrontational will of the US and the ROK to remain hostile towards the DPRK," the state news agency KCNA said on Tuesday, using the acronyms for South and North Korea.

That pledge and a series of large-scale joint military drills by the two countries posed grave challenges to the North's security and aggravated regional tensions, it said.

It accused Seoul of secretly advancing a "long-cherished ambition to possess nuclear weapons" that is bound to set off a "nuclear domino phenomenon" in the region and spark an arms race.

South Korea's Lee has said the submarines were critical to maintaining readiness against China's naval forces and the potentially grave threat from the nuclear-armed North's push to develop its own nuclear-powered submarines.

South Korean presidential office spokesperson Kang Yu-jung said later on Tuesday that Seoul has no hostile or confrontational intent against the North and cooperation with the US was intended to protect its national security interests.

Hong Min, a North Korea expert at the Korea Institute for National Unification in Seoul, said the commentary showed the North remained unwilling to engage in dialogue with Washington as long as the US did not recognise it as a nuclear state.

Trump has said he is ready to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. The pair met three times during the US president's first term, aiming for a nuclear deal, but failed to reach an agreement. - Reuters

 

 

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
North Korea , South , US , submarines , nuclear

Next In Aseanplus News

Singapore's Changi Airport traffic hits a whopping 17.6 million in the first quarter; up 2.3 per cent
China doubles ‘AI for science’ computing scale in two months using no US chips
Shereen clocks golden comeback, Umar roars in Lion City too
Rohingya sea crossings hit record death toll in 2025, UNHCR says
Dewan Rakyat Speaker yet to receive letter on Opposition leader’s resignation
Tycoon Pan Shiyi slams China property ‘Ponzi’ as Evergrande boss pleads guilty
Hongkonger arrested on suspicion of underage sex and scamming girls of HK$33,000
Myanmar's ex-president freed after pardon of post-coup convictions
US cites optimism over a deal even as Iran threatens to shut down Red Sea shipping
Hong Kong police hunt for man behind theft of two Pokemon cards worth HK$28,000

Others Also Read