Pyongyang,
April 14 (KCNA) -- The policy section chief of the Institute for Japan Studies
of the DPRK Foreign Ministry gave the following answer to a question raised by
KCNA on Friday as regards the fact that Japan in its recent "2023
Diplomatic Blue Book" groundlessly pulled up the DPRK over its measures
for bolstering up the self- defensive military capabilities and called for "solution
of the abduction issue":
Japan
made public the "2023 Diplomatic Blue Book" on April 11, revealing
once again its sinister intention full of undisguised hostile stand against the
DPRK, fraud and deception.
The
Japanese Foreign Ministry in its diplomatic blue book called for
"implementing the UNSC resolution" and again raised the abduction
issue which had already been settled, terming the DPRK's measures for
bolstering up the military capabilities for self-defence a "challenge to
the international community" and a "threat to peace and
security". This clearly proves that Japan's wrong view, inveterate
repugnancy and hostility toward the DPRK have not changed at all.
Japan,
which seeks to realize its dangerous "ambition for becoming a military
giant" while zealously following the reckless military threatening moves
of the U.S. and the south Korean puppet forces, is spouting a litany of
rhetoric about the DPRK's war deterrence for self-defence. It is a challenge to
the sovereignty of the DPRK and interference in its internal affairs.
It
is quite natural that Japan's diplomatic blue book has been censured and
rejected by neighboring countries and the international community as it is a
conspiratorial document seeking such sinister political purpose.
Japan
openly revealed its hostility toward the DPRK while impertinently talking about
the dismantlement of its nukes and missiles and persistently raising the
already- settled abduction issue, thus making clearer the stand of
confrontation with the DPRK.
Japan
which inflicted indelible misfortune and sufferings upon the Korean people in
the last century has not yet honestly redeemed its crimes. It had better ponder
over whether it is beneficial to Japan's interests to persistently resort to
hostile acts against the DPRK, zealously pursuant to the U.S.
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