SEOUL: North Korea has warned of retaliation after
the US scrapped food aid over its rocket launch, raising fears of a new nuclear
test, as China reportedly suspended a refugee deal with its wayward ally.
In a
defiant statement late Tuesday, the nuclear-armed North broke off a bilateral
agreement to halt testing of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles after
Washington suspended much-needed food aid.
"We
have thus become able to take necessary retaliatory measures, free from the
agreement. The US will be held wholly accountable for all the ensuing
consequences," its foreign ministry said.
South
Korean analysts said they expect the North to follow up by staging a third
nuclear weapons test, or launching another long-range missile.
The
North also rejected condemnation by the United Nations Security Council,
including its ally China, of the failed launch last Friday.
Japan's
Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper said on Wednesday that China has suspended the
refugee repatriation deal because it was not consulted about the launch, seen
by the US and its allies as a covert test of ballistic missile technology.
The
paper quoted two Chinese officials as saying the longstanding policy of swiftly
returning North Koreans as economic migrants -- despite the punishment they
face back home -- had been put on hold.
"North
Korea failed to disclose specific plans of the missile launch to the Chinese
side," the paper quoted one unidentified official as saying.
The
suspension reflects Beijing's displeasure with its neighbour which "did
not show the necessary attention to its friend, China", the official said.
Pyongyang
insists its botched satellite launch was not a missile test and did not breach
a February deal with Washington, under which it vowed to suspend uranium
enrichment and nuclear and missile tests in return for food aid.
But the
US called off plans to start shipping 240,000 tonnes of food, saying the North
could no longer be trusted.
On
Monday, a Security Council statement "strongly condemned" the launch.
It ordered a tightening of existing sanctions and warned of new action if the
isolated state stages another nuclear or long-range missile test.
Pyongyang
said Washington had imposed a "brigandish demand" on the Council and
that every country has the right to launch satellites for peaceful purposes.
"Nothing
can stand in the way of (North Korea)'s space development for peaceful
purposes," it vowed.
The
North had planned its launch as a centrepiece of mass celebrations for the centenary
of the birth of founding president Kim Il-Sung, grandfather of current leader
Kim Jong-Un.
At a
major military parade on Sunday featuring troops and weaponry, it wheeled out
an apparently new long-range missile.
The
North staged atomic weapons tests months after its long-range rocket launches
in 2006 and 2009, which also earned UN condemnation.
"With
the February agreement broken down in practice, the North will likely take many
of the steps the US and South Korea have long feared, including another nuclear
test and a long-range missile test," said Paik Hak-Soon of the South's
Sejong Institute think-tank.
Paik
told AFP it was hard to imagine any conciliatory US gesture in an election
year, and a presidential election was also looming in South Korea.
"The
North has realised, given the situation in the US and the South, that it is
unlikely there will be any major diplomatic breakthroughs with either country
until early 2013.
"So
it will do whatever it wants to do until then," he said.
Yang
Moo-Jin of Seoul's University of North Korean Studies said that when the US and
the Security Council start taking punitive actions, "Pyongyang will
certainly respond with actions as well.
"These
would include a third nuclear test, or test-launching of an inter-continental
ballistic missile or stepping up activities involving weapons-grade
uranium," Yang said.
-
AFP/al
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