|
Spokesman for DPRK FM Lambastes U.S.
Smear Campaign against DPRK
Pyongyang, February 5 (KCNA) -- A spokesman for the
Foreign Ministry of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea today gave
the following answer to the question put by KCNA as regards the U.S.
ridiculous smear campaign against the DPRK.
These days the United States is busy holding a
Congressional hearing from "north Korean defectors," spreading
a sheer lie that north Korea tested a chemical weapon on prisoners, the
spokesman said, and went on:
The U.S. let loose a string of balderdash against the
DPRK over "the issue of drug", "the issue of counterfeit
money" and "the issue of north Korean defectors". Not
content with this, it is spreading a lie about the "test of
chemical weapons on prisoners".
This shows what a base anti-DPRK smear campaign the
Bush group is engaged in.
The U.S. seems to have no more material for
conducting such a campaign.
It is a trite method of the present U.S.
administration to use those defectors for inventing lies and justifying
a war of aggression under that pretext. This was clearly evidenced by
the U.S. war of aggression against Iraq.
We do not feel any need to argue about this cheap
U.S. propaganda, but we can hardly overlook an ulterior aim sought by
it.
Now the Bush administration finds itself in a tight
corner as it provoked a war against Iraq after deceiving Americans and
the world. The Bush group, dismayed at the election campaign turning
unfavorable for it, is working hard to get rid of the difficult
situation by leading the situation on the Korean peninsula to an extreme
pitch of tension under the pretext of the nuclear issue.
Its dirty smear campaign is aimed to invent plausible
pretexts for starting another Korean war, raising a hue and cry over the
"human rights issue" in addition to the "issue of weapons
of mass destruction," and thus not to repeat its setbacks in Iraq.
We are watching every movement of the Bush
administration with vigilance.
Some media acting tools for the U.S. smear campaign
for cheap publicity are well advised to come to themselves, though
belatedly.
|