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N.Korean missile launch not provocation: Biden

It was the first missile launch since Biden took oath as US president. Biden said defence officials called it “business as usual”…reports Asian Lite News

US President Joe Biden has said he does not consider North Korea’s launch of short-range missiles as a provocation.

The launch is the first since Biden took office. Biden said defence officials called it “business as usual”, the BBC reported on Wednesday.

North Korea is said to have fired non-ballistic cruise missiles, which do not flout UN Security Council resolutions, over the weekend.

The incident happened after Pyongyang criticised the US and South Korea for conducting joint military exercises.

It also comes as Biden’s administration continues to attempt to establish diplomatic relations with North Korea.

The launch, originally reported by US media, has since been confirmed by US officials and the South Korean defence ministry.

South Korea said two cruise missiles were fired into the Yellow Sea early on Sunday from Onchon in North Korea.

Responding to reporters’ questions on Tuesday night, Biden said: “We have learned that nothing has changed.”

When asked if he considered the test as a provocation, he said: “No, according to the Defence Department, it’s business as usual. There’s no new wrinkle in what they did.”

UN Security Council resolutions, which have resulted in strict sanctions on North Korea, have only banned Pyongyang from firing threatening weapons such as ballistic missiles.

Also read:Putin invites Biden to virtual talks

This is no “fire and fury” from North Korea.

It’s true that every test of a missile by Pyongyang helps improve its military capabilities and that is always a concern to the international community.

But cruise missile tests are not a breach of UN Security Council sanctions and North Korea has bigger weapons in its arsenal if it really wanted to challenge the Biden administration.

The current focus of the new White House team and its allies is the impending review on North Korea policy.

Decades of sanctions and three summits between former US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un have failed to prevent Pyongyang from developing a larger and more deadly nuclear arsenal.

So President Biden is most likely shrugging off this latest missile test for good reason – there’s a much bigger challenge ahead.

Senior US officials have separately said they considered the action as “most normal military activity by the North”.

They added they were in the “final stages” of their North Korea policy review and planned to host Japan and South Korea’s national security advisers for a discussion soon.

The US government had previously said it had been trying for weeks to make diplomatic contact with North Korea.

Pyongyang has yet to acknowledge that President Biden is now in office, and the two countries remain at loggerheads over the North’s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.

During Biden’s election campaign, he called Kim “a thug” and said North Korean nuclear disarmament had to happen before US and UN economic sanctions could be relaxed.

Also read:‘Biden admin mulls corporate tax hike’

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Malaysia ousts N.Korean diplomats

“This action is a reminder that Malaysia shall never tolerate any attempt to meddle in our internal affairs and judiciary, disrespect our governance system,said Foreign Minister Hishammuddin Hussein ..reports Asian Lite News

Malaysia has expelled all diplomats of the North Korean Embassy here in response to the latter’s decision to sever diplomatic ties after Kuala Lumpur extradited a Pyongyang national to the US over money laundering charges.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Foreign Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said: “Malaysia has today expelled all diplomats of the Embassy of North Korea in Kuala Lumpur in keeping with the decision for all diplomatic staff and their dependents to leave within 48 hours.

“The expulsion has been carried out in conformity with Article 9 of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations 1961. The government of Malaysia took this action in response to North Korea’s unilateral and utterly irresponsible decision to sever diplomatic ties with Malaysia.

“This action is a reminder that Malaysia shall never tolerate any attempt to meddle in our internal affairs and judiciary, disrespect our governance system, and constantly create unnecessary tensions in defiance of the rules-based international order.”

Vehicles carrying the North Korean diplomatic staff and their families were seen leaving their embassy in Kuala Lumpur on Sunday morning and headed to the airport, reports Xinhua news agency.

Before leaving the embassy, Charge d’Affairs Kim Yu Song told the media that by extraditing a North Korean citizen to the US, the Malaysian authority had destroyed the entire foundation of bilateral relations.

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Mun Chol-myong, the Malaysia-based North Korean businessman, was accused of supplying prohibited luxury items from Singapore to Pyongyang and laundering funds through shell companies in violation of UN sanctions.

Last week, Malaysia’s top court ruled that he can be extradited to Washington, rejecting his appeal challenging the extradition request from the US.

He was detained in May 2019.

In a report on March 19, Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said: “On March 17, the Malaysian authority committed an unpardonable crime, in the end, of forcibly delivering the innocent citizen of the North Korea to the US by having charged him with ‘criminal’.

“With regard to the grave situation that has prevailed, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs hereby announces total severance of the diplomatic relations with Malaysia which committed a super-large hostile act in subservience to the US pressure.”

Malaysia’s Foreign Ministry stressed that the extradition of the North Korean national was conducted in accordance with the principles of justice, rule of law and independence of judiciary.

Also read:N.Korea breaks ties with Malaysia