North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (C) visits the Thrice Three-Revolution
Red Flag Kamnamu (persimmon tree) Company under the Korean People's Army
Unit 4302 in this undated picture released by the North's official KCNA
news agency in Pyongyang on August 24, 2012. REUTERS/KCNA
SEOUL
North Korea has rockets
that can hit the U.S.
mainland, it said on Tuesday, two days after South Korea struck a deal with the United States
to extend the range of its ballistic missiles.
North and South Korea have been technically at war since
their 1950-53 conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, and regional
powers have for years been trying to rein in North Korea's nuclear weapons
program. Reclusive North Korea is believed to be developing a long-range
missile with a range of 6,700 km (4,160) miles) or more aimed at hitting the United States, but
two recent rocket tests failed.
Its neighbors fear North Korea is using rocket launches to perfect
technology to build a missile capable of delivering a nuclear warhead to the
United States.North Korea's National
Defence Commission said in a statement that the country was
prepared to counter any U.S. military threats, its KCNA news agency said.
"We do not hide (the fact) that the revolutionary armed forces ...
including the strategic rocket forces are keeping within the scope of strike
not only the bases of the puppet forces and the U.S. imperialist aggression
forces' bases in the inviolable land of Korea, but also Japan, Guam and the U.S.
mainland," KCNA said.
The U.S. State Department declined to
discuss whether it believed North Korea's new claims on missile range, saying
this was an intelligence issue. But it noted that North Korea is bound by U.N.
Security Council resolutions to suspend all activities related to ballistic missile
programs.
"Certainly rather than bragging
about its missile capability, they ought to be feeding their own people,"
State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said, adding that "threats or
provocations" by North Korea would only undermine its efforts to seek more
engagement with the international community.
South Korea on Sunday unveiled an
agreement with the United States that extends the range of its ballistic
missiles by more than twice its current limit to 800 km (497 miles) as a
deterrent against North Korea. North Korea is under heavy U.N. sanctions that
have cut off its previously lucrative arms trade and further isolated the state
after its failed 2009 missile test drew sharp rebukes, even from its one major
ally, China.
The United States has denied it has any intention to strike North Korea. It
has more than 20,000 troops stationed in South Korea in defense of its ally
against North Korea.
In April, under its new leader Kim
Jong-un, North Korea again launched a rocket that flew just a few minutes
covering a little over 100 km (60 miles) before blowing up over the sea between
South Korea and China. (Reporting by Jack Kim; Additional reporting by Andrew
Quinn in Washington; Editing by Nick Macfie and Will Dunham)
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