Pro-Pyongyang paper takes note of omission of North Korea from U.S. security strategy report

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Pro-Pyongyang paper takes note of omission of North Korea from U.S. security strategy report

 
U.S. President Donald Trump, left, meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un at the North Korean side of the border at the village of Panmunjom in the demilitarized zone on June 30, 2019. [AP/YONHAP]

U.S. President Donald Trump, left, meets with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un at the North Korean side of the border at the village of Panmunjom in the demilitarized zone on June 30, 2019. [AP/YONHAP]

 
A pro-Pyongyang newspaper on Thursday took note of the omission of North Korean issues from a recent security strategy road map released by the Donald Trump administration, calling it the "most notable" aspect.
 
"What is the most notable part is the fact that it does not mention" North Korea, the Japan-based Choson Sinbo said in an editorial in its Thursday edition, assessing the recent National Security Strategy (NSS) released in early December.
 

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This year's NSS, which serves as a new strategic road map for the United States, made no mention of North Korea or its nuclear issues in a major departure from previous editions, raising questions in Seoul about whether the issue may be put on the back burner under the Trump administration.
 
It must be "because mentioning North Korea would mean the U.S. is admitting a complete failure in its policy to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula," the newspaper said.
 
The news outlet, run by a Japan-based Korean organization sympathetic to North Korea, is widely seen as reflecting the regime's official stance.
 
Thursday's editorial marks the newspaper's first reaction to the NSS, while North Korea's state media has issued no response so far.
 
The news outlet claimed that the latest NSS carried little international security analysis but was filled with the U.S.-first policy, calling it "self-contradictory" and "factually distorting."
 
It also accused the NSS of casting Trump's image as a "peacemaker," calling it a "too exaggerated assessment."

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