S Korea to coordinate with US, Japan on N Korea sanctions
Last updated on: 13 December,2022 10:15 am
Decades of US-led sanctions have failed to halt North Korea program.
JAKARTA (Reuters) - South Korea, Japan and the United States will coordinate sanctions and close gaps in the international sanctions regime against North Korea, Seoul’s envoy for North Korea said on Tuesday.
Kim Gunn, South Korea’s Special Representative for Korean Peninsula Peace and Security Affairs, said at a meeting with his US and Japanese counterparts that North Korea was "becoming more aggressive and blatant in its nuclear threat".
"North Korea’s further provocation will be met by a firm and united response from the international community," he said.
The three countries this month imposed more sanctions on North Korean officials connected to the country’s weapons programmes after Pyongyang’s intercontinental ballistic missile test.
The sanctions follow a Nov. 18 ICBM test by North Korea, part of a spate of more than 60 missile launches this year, and amid concerns that it may be about to resume nuclear weapons testing, which has been suspended since 2017.
Decades of US-led sanctions have failed to halt North Korea’s increasingly sophisticated missile and nuclear weapon programmes.
US Special Representative for North Korea Sung Kim said on Tuesday at the meeting in Jakarta that the behaviour of Pyongyang presented one of the most serious security challenges to the region and beyond.
Meanwhile, Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Director General for Asian and Oceanian Affairs Bureau Funakoshi Takehiro said the three allies had elevated security cooperation to an unprecedented level.
He said the trio would examine all options including counter strike capabilities and be more vigilant against North Korea’s cyber threat.
Japan recently designated three entities and an individual for new sanctions, including the Lazarus Group suspected of carrying out cyberattacks.
China and Russia have blocked recent efforts to impose more United Nations sanctions, saying they should instead be eased to jumpstart talks and avoid humanitarian harm. That has left Washington to focus on its efforts with South Korea and Japan, as well as European partners.