North Korea vowed Tuesday to send more of
its sinister “gift packages” to the U.S. -- similar to the Hermit
Kingdom's recent nuclear test -- as the French defense minister warned
of the rogue nation’s missiles reaching Europe sooner than expected.
Han Tae Song, the ambassador of North Korea to the U.N. in Geneva, said
at the U.N.-sponsored Conference on Disarmament that Sunday’s supposed
hydrogen bomb test was “addressed to none other than the U.S,” Reuters
reported.
"The U.S. will receive more gift packages from my country as long as it
relies on reckless provocations and futile attempts to put pressure on
the DPRK," Han said.
The volatile dictatorship claimed to have detonated a hydrogen bomb that
triggered an artificial magnitude 6.3 earthquake on Sunday. It later
called the test a “perfect success.” It was the sixth nuclear test North
Korea has conducted and the first since September 2016.
French defense minister Florence Parly said Europe could also face North
Korea’s wrath sooner than expected, according to Reuters. North Korea
test-launched its first intercontinental ballistic missile in July,
following a series of other missile launches earlier this year.
“The scenario of an escalation towards a major conflict cannot be
discarded,” Parly said during a speech to the French military. “Europe
risks being within range of [North Korean leader] Kim Jong Un’s missiles
sooner than expected.”
The comments come as North Korea reportedly moved a possible ICBM toward
its west coast. The Asia Business Daily, citing an unnamed source, said
the rocket was moved overnight to avoid being detected. South Korea’s
defense Ministry also said earlier Tuesday the regime appeared to be
planning a future launch.
North Korea has continuously threatened to send bigger and increasingly
more unexpected "gift packages" to the U.S. in order to quell President
Trump's rhetoric and international pressure on its missile and nuclear
program. It previously claimed America was "on the knife's edge of life
and death."
Sunday’s nuclear test drew global condemnation. U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Nikki Haley said on Monday North Korea was “begging for
war,” adding that “the time for half measures…is over.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel condemned the latest nuclear test was a
"flagrant violation" of international conventions, but also said there
can only be a "diplomatic and peaceful solution" of the crisis.
On Sunday, Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called the test "absolutely
unacceptable” and South Korea said it planned to ramp up its defenses in
response.
|
|