N. Korea looks set for 'fire and fury' provocations: U.S. expert
SEOUL, June 24 (Yonhap) -- North Korea is expected to further escalate regional tensions with more provocative acts, enjoying the tacit support of China and Russia, according to a former senior U.S. State Department official Friday.
Pyongyang is apparently seeking to exploit the intensifying hegemony competition between the U.S. and China, and feuds over Russia's war in Ukraine, according to Daniel Russel, who served as assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs under the Barack Obama administration.
"Pyongyang understands that there is no chance that Beijing or Moscow would go along with any Western penalties on North Korea even if North Korea conducts a seventh nuclear test or launches an intercontinental ballistic missile," he said, as he joined an annual Seoul peace forum, co-hosted by Yonhap News Agency and the Ministry of Unification, virtually.
Russel, currently vice president for International Security and Diplomacy at the Asia Society Policy Institute, is known for his expertise on regional issues, especially Northeast Asian affairs.
He said the North is likely headed for another period of "fire and fury," adding its leader, Kim Jong-un, is now well aware that he can "count on China and Russia to tolerate and protect him more than ever before."
The North is closely watching the international community's response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the Moscow-Beijing ties and the Washington-Beijing standoffs, he said.
On South Korea-U.S. relations, Russel said Seoul is "urgently needed as an active partner" in various areas "on and beyond the Korean Peninsula" for the Joe Biden administration's Indo-Pacific strategy, which includes close coordination and collective defense among like-minded allies.
Meanwhile, Korean American Rep. Young Kim (R-CA), who also took part in the symposium via videoconferencing, stressed that the North Korean human rights issue should be handled together with other pending issues, including denuclearization.
She said both South Korea and the U.S. should ratchet up pressure on the North's leader to abide by universal values.
julesyi@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
BTS' Jungkook's 'Seven' chosen as hottest hit outside U.S.
-
BTS' RM to prerelease 'Come Back to Me,' music video directed by Lee Jung-jin of 'Beef'
-
N. Korea dismantles S. Korean building near shuttered Kaesong complex
-
Yoon pledges to increase monthly senior basic pension benefit
-
(Yonhap Interview) U.S. will do 'all' it can to back S. Korea in case of China's economic coercion: official
-
BTS' RM to prerelease 'Come Back to Me,' music video directed by Lee Jung-jin of 'Beef'
-
BTS' Jungkook's 'Seven' chosen as hottest hit outside U.S.
-
(Yonhap Interview) U.S. will do 'all' it can to back S. Korea in case of China's economic coercion: official
-
N. Korea dismantles S. Korean building near shuttered Kaesong complex
-
N. Korean economic delegation returns from Iran amid suspected military ties
-
BTS' RM to prerelease 'Come Back to Me,' music video directed by Lee Jung-jin of 'Beef'
-
(3rd LD) U.S. soldier detained in Russia over alleged misconduct after finishing tour of duty in S. Korea
-
KF-21 fighter jet prototype to conduct 1st Meteor missile test
-
Top S. Korean envoy to Russia attends Putin's inauguration ceremony: Seoul official
-
Top prosecutor pledges 'speedy, strict' probe into first lady's luxury bag allegations