Anchor: A key White House aide has rejected growing calls from China and Russia for lifting sanctions on North Korea. However, the option of sanctions relief could be discussed again when Washington's chief nuclear envoy visits Beijing later this week to make sure UN Security Council members remain unified in denuclearizing North Korea.
Kim Bum-soo has more.
Report:
[Sound bite: Kellyanne Conway - Counselor to US President]
(Reporter: On North Korea, Kellyanne, can you comment on this proposal by China and Russia to ease UN sanctions on North Korea?)
"Well we’re not easing U.S. sanctions on North Korea, I can tell you that."
Trump White House counselor Kellyanne Conway says sanctions relief is not an option.
[Sound bite: Kellyanne Conway - Counselor to US President]
"The president’s keeping sanctions in place and we need to see full and verifiable and irreversible denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula. The president has made that very clear and if it’s not there the sanctions will remain."
Speaking to reporters at the White House on Tuesday, Conway addressed growing calls from China and Russia, regurgitating President Donald Trump's focus on sanctions.
But as U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper told reporters earlier this week, North Korea could resume testing intercontinental ballistic missiles unless sanctions are lifted, signaling in dramatic fashion the death of agreements made with the U.S.
[Sound bite: US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper (In-flight Q&A Dec. 16)]
"It is a concern, their rhetoric. We have seen talk of tests. I think that they will be likely if they don't feel satisfied...”
North Korea’s Korean War allies Beijing and Moscow have circulated a draft resolution at the UN Security Council to partly lift sanctions on Pyongyang. Reuters said the draft calls for allowing North Korean workers to keep their jobs abroad as well as exempting inter-Korean rail and road projects from UN sanctions.
Despite the initial rejection, Beijing is expected to bring up the sanctions issue again when U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Stephen Biegun visits China from Thursday.
Pyongyang has been threatening to reverse its vague agreements for denuclearization unless Washington softens its terms for a deal by the end of this month. With that deadline fast approaching, North Korea has publicized its recent resumption of tests at a key satellite launch facility on the country’s western coast.
Kim Bum-soo, KBS World Radio News.