Friday, September 19, 2008 - 11:59 AM
North Korea said on Friday it did not wish to be taken off a U.S. terrorism blacklist, a reward it would be given if it abided by a disarmament deal, indicating it was stepping away from the pact. The North also said it had begun work to restore its Soviet-era nuclear Yongbyon plant that makes bomb-grade plutonium which was being taken apart under a disarmament-for-aid deal it reached with five regional powers, including the United States. "The DPRK (North Korea) neither wishes to be delisted as a 'state sponsor of terrorism' nor expects such a thing to happen," the North's official KCNA news agency quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesman as saying. Analysts have said the North might be trying to pressure the outgoing Bush administration as it looks for diplomatic successes to bolster its legacy. The North might also be thinking it can wait for a new U.S. president to try to get a better deal. Last month, North Korea said it planned to restart Yongbyon because it was angry at Washington for not taking it off a terrorism blacklist. In early September, it made minor but initial moves to restart the plant, U.S. officials said.This is likely a bargaining tactic. In some perverse way, you have to admire a country that says, "No, no, we're still a terrorist nation!"
hahahah.
I don´t know. I kind of take the response of not wishing or expecting to be removed as not really caring if they are removed, as if to deny any concern over it or recognizing the U.S. as the World Police Force.
It's a signaling game. Leave us on the list, we're scary. Rarrr!
Maybe it's NK's way of observing Talk Like a Pirate Day. I do believe that in NK, they pronounce r- in word-initial position, unlike SK, where it ends up sounding like n-, as in Rodong vs. Nodong 'work, labor'. They're definitely more piratical up north!
You've got to admire their chutzpah. Too bad they can't eat it.
That's strange, considering that for the most of the summer they've railed at the US for not de-listing them in exchange for the declaration and the destruction of the Yongbyon cooling tower.
I don't know if "admire" is quite the right word.
Then again, perhaps it's some weird DPRK way of saying they don't want any favors at all from George W., as they might be somehow tainted by the mere presence of his bad karma.
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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