产品展示
  • 22款本田19新凌派改装饰配件车内饰汽车用品贴专用门槛条迎宾踏板
  • 专用16-22款宝马X1汽车坐垫全包围装饰真皮座椅套垫内饰改装配件
  • 10寸12寸车载音响改装大功率发烧炸街无源双音圈双磁低音炮
  • 适用于20款现代领动前杠雾灯改装LED日行灯日间行车灯转向辅助灯
  • 汽车电瓶充电器12v24v智能脉冲修复快速充电机摩托车电瓶充电器
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

North Korea slams Yoon as 'pro

2024-05-29 18:59:05      点击:327
Incoming President Yoon Suk-yeol / Yonhap
Incoming President Yoon Suk-yeol / Yonhap

A major North Korean propaganda website denounced on Thursday South Korea's incoming president Yoon Suk-yeol, who has vowed to take a tougher line on weapons tests by Pyongyang, describing him as "pro-United States", and "confrontational".

The North's state media have yet to make formal comments on Yoon, a conservative who is set to take office on May 10, but the website Uriminzokkiri issued scathing criticism ahead of his inauguration.

"Yoon Suk-yeol had aroused shock with such preposterous remarks as 'preemptive strike' and 'main enemy,' and stirred up confrontational madness trumpeting a 'stronger South Korea-U.S. alliance,'" it said.

It was referring to comments by Yoon that he would allow a pre-emptive strike on North Korea if signs of attack were imminent, and his description of the neighboring nation as a "main enemy".

That description of the North has been shunned by outgoing progressive President Moon Jae-in, who had sought to improve relations.

The propaganda site's remarks are a departure from past practice, when state media have trumpeted news of a missile test by the North on the day following, but have this time kept silent, instead, about Wednesday's weapons test.

The propaganda site criticized Yoon and his picks for ministers of defense, foreign affairs and the unification portfolio as "pro-U.S. toadies" who had sought confrontation while serving in previous conservative governments.

"There's nothing strange for him to nominate pro-U.S. toadies seeking confrontation with the same people," it added.

On Wednesday, South Korea's military reported the North's 14th known weapons test this year, which analysts said could aim at testing its reconnaissance satellite technology.

In March, South Korea said a North Korean intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) exploded mid-air soon after liftoff. State media made no mention at the time, but another, presumably successful, ICBM launch took place days later.

"North Korea might not announce failed tests, but it's too early to say that's the case, and the latest launch appeared rather successful as it showed some progress," said Park Won-gon, a professor of North Korean studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul. (Reuters)



Man's live tweets from a café prove love isn't dead just yet
North Korea holds military parade to mark key anniversary: source