U.S. will hold N. Korea accountable for provocative missile launches: State Dept.
By Byun Duk-kun
WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 (Yonhap) -- The United States has a range of ways to hold North Korea accountable for its provocative actions, a state department spokesperson said Thursday, one day after China and Russia blocked a U.S.-led move to put U.N. Security Council sanctions on Pyongyang.
Vedant Patel, principal deputy spokesperson for the state department, also said the U.S. continues to closely monitor North Korea and will take additional action if necessary.
"We continue to have a number of tools in our tool belt -- sanctions, other things -- to continue to hold the regime accountable," the spokesperson said in a press briefing.
"I don't have any specific actions to preview," he said when asked if the U.S. is taking any concrete steps to punish North Korea for its recent missile launches. "But the United States is monitoring and watching closely and ready to take additional action as well."
North Korea fired two short-range ballistic missiles on Thursday (Seoul time), its sixth missile launch in less than two weeks.
Pyongyang also flew a group of eight fighter jets and four bombers near the inter-Korean border on Thursday in apparent protest against joint military exercises between South Korea and the U.S. that it claims provoked its recent missile launches.
Defense department spokesperson Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder dismissed the North's claim that its missile launches had been provoked.
"Us participating in exercises in the region or engaging in bilateral or trilateral exercises is not something new," he said of the North Korean claim in a department press briefing.
"We have a long standing defense relationship with both South Korea and with Japan, and these are defensive exercises that are focused on how we would defend ourselves and how we would deter and they are not a threat at all to the region, unlike the provocative activities coming from North Korea," he added.
In response to North Korea's continued missile launches, the U.S. has redeployed its aircraft carrier, USS Ronald Reagan, to the East Sea on Wednesday, nearly a week after the carrier left South Korean waters following a joint naval exercise with South Korea.
Ryder said the USS Ronald Reagan Carrier Strike Group has conducted trilateral missile defense exercises with South Korean and Japanese naval forces since its return to waters between South Korea and Japan.
"These exercises send a clear message of allied unity between our nations and enhance the interoperability of our collective forces. The exercises also demonstrate the deep strength of our trilateral relationship with Japan and the Republic of Korea, which is resolute against those who challenge regional stability," he said, referring to South Korea by its official name.
bdk@yna.co.kr
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