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North Korea fires back at Marco Rubio, calls top US diplomat's comments ‘nonsense’

FP Staff February 3, 2025, 05:42:06 IST

In a recent radio interview, Rubio mentioned North Korea and Iran as ‘rogue states’ that ‘you have to deal with’ when making foreign policy decisions

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Secretary of State Marco Rubio. File image/AP
Secretary of State Marco Rubio. File image/AP

North Korea slammed Marco Rubio on Monday for referring to the country as a “rogue state,” rejecting the top US diplomat’s recent interview statement as “nonsense.”

In Pyongyang’s first public condemnation of the incoming Trump administration, a foreign ministry spokesperson stated that “we will never tolerate any provocation of the US… but will take tough counteraction corresponding to it as usual,” according to a statement broadcast by state news service KCNA.

The remarks came after US President Donald Trump, who took office last month, stated that he would “reach out” to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, having already met with him during his first term.

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In a recent radio interview, Rubio mentioned North Korea and Iran as “rogue states” that “you have to deal with” when making foreign policy decisions.

The US secretary of state “talked nonsense by terming the DPRK a ‘rogue state’”, the foreign ministry spokesman said, using the official acronym for the North.

“The Foreign Ministry of the DPRK deems the US State Secretary’s hostile remarks to thoughtlessly tarnish the image of a sovereign state as a grave political provocation.”

Largely cut off from the world diplomatically and economically, and under a bevy of sanctions, North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme has been a major thorn in the side of the United States for years.

Trump, who had a rare series of meetings with Kim during his first term, said in January that he would reach out to the North Korean leader again, calling Kim a “smart guy”.

A summit between the two in Hanoi collapsed in 2019 over talks on sanctions relief and what Pyongyang would be willing to give up in return.

Last week, despite Trump’s diplomatic overtures, North Korea said its nuclear programme would continue “indefinitely”.

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