North Korea: Nukes are our country's 'life'
NBC's Ian Williams reports on the latest tensions emanating from North Korea.
By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News
One
of North Korea's top decision-making bodies is setting guidelines that
call nuclear weapons "the nation's life" that won't be traded even for
"billions of dollars,” The Associated Press reported.
The
statement Sunday came after a plenary meeting of the central committee
of the ruling Workers' Party attended by leader Kim Jong Un and other
officials, the AP said.
It also followed
a declaration on Saturday that it was entering a "state of war" with South Korea, the latest in a string of increasingly belligerent outbursts from the isolated state.
Sunday’s statement says nuclear weapons aren't "goods for getting
U.S. dollars" or a "political bargaining chip." Outside analysts have
said Pyongyang raises worries over its nuclear ambitions to spur
nuclear-disarmament-for-aid talks, the AP said.
It said Pyongyang will also increase work to build up the economy. Kim has made fixing the moribund economy a focus.
On
Thursday the U.S. sent two nuclear-capable bombers to South Korea,
where they dropped inert munitions in a military exercise. The flight
sparked an angry response from the North, which declared on Friday that
it was preparing rockets aimed at American bases in South Korea and the
Pacific.
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