calendar>>November 26. 2015 Juche 104
Minju Joson Assails S. Korean Chief Executive for Her Outbursts Inciting Confrontation
Pyongyang, November 26 (KCNA) -- The south Korean chief executive, addressing international meetings during her recent foreign junkets, cried out for pressurizing the north "to make a strategic decision to abandon its nuclear program," talking rubbish that the "nuclear issue of the north is a serious threat to the region and the rest of the world."

She went the lengths of soliciting "cooperation of foreign forces in the nuclear racket against the north," not content with her ridiculous behavior to lead the north to "changes," jabbering that the "north could hardly get what it desired through its nuclear development."

Commenting on these remarks, Minju Joson Thursday says:

What she uttered is no more than jargons of a wicked confrontation maniac keen to realize the wild ambition for achieving "unification of social systems" in zealous pursuance of the U.S. hostile policy towards the DPRK.

The nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula was spawned by the ever more undisguised U.S. hostile policy towards the DPRK.

It was none other than the U.S. which made a mockery of the DPRK's sincere efforts for the denuclearization on the peninsula. It resorted to every move to stifle the DPRK, labeling the DPRK as an "outpost of tyranny and a rogue state."

The U.S. regards the peninsula as a bridgehead for realizing its ambition for world domination. It has left no means untried to deliberately deteriorate the regional situation, displeased with a climate for improving the inter-Korean relations.

It is as plain as a pikestaff that once a war breaks out on the peninsula where the interests of big powers are intertwined, it will spill over into the neighboring countries.

This being a hard reality, the chief executive of south Korea is vociferating about the "threat from the north." Her claim only reveals her sinister intention to achieve the "unification of social systems" by justifying the saber-rattling for invading the DPRK.

She is working hard to lead the DPRK to "changes" with sheer sophism that its abandonment of its nuclear program would open the "road to prosperity." This rhetoric only touches off towering resentment among service personnel and people of the DPRK.

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