Zhang Jun said China also hoped that the revision of US policy would be of equivalent importance to the nuclear factor and the peace and security factor.
“If we don’t handle the security and peace factor well, we won’t have the right environment for our denuclearization efforts,” he said.
The White House said last Friday that Biden planned to move away from the approaches of his two newest predecessors as he tried to avoid North Korea’s nuclear program, rejecting Donald Trump’s deeply private effort to win over leader Kim Jong Un and other hands of Barack Obama – out of focus. Press Secretary Jen Psaki said management officials had completed a review of U. S. policy toward North Korea, but gave details on their findings.
Biden’s management gave the impression of signing that it seeks to lay the groundwork for a slow advance, in which denuclearization steps across the North would be accompanied by appropriate actions, adding sanctions relief, across the United States.
U. S. security promises for North Korea or the official end of the Korean War, any of which had been demanded across the North and thought of as part of trump’s team as part of a broader package, are not mentioned.
China assumed the presidency of the United Nations Security Council this month and Ambassador Zhang said at a press convention that Beijing will “very carefully” review U. S. policy in the hope that it will place greater emphasis on dialogue.
A year ago, China and Russia circulated a draft solution on lifting some sanctions opposing North Korea, and Zhang said it was still on the table, under pressure that if China implements sanctions against North Korea, it also believes that the Security Council deserves to adjust and lift sanctions “that actually prevent humanitarian access . . . and make other people suffer. “
“At some point, timely adjustment (of sanctions) will have smart effects by creating a more favorable environment to address this problem,” the ambassador said.
North Korea said Sunday that Biden made a mistake calling the country a security risk in a speech to Congress last week and warned that he was opposed to an unidentified response.
Regarding the existing situation, Mr. Zhang said: “We hear harsh words and see tensions at some level, in general it remains stable. “
Referring to North Korea and the United States, he said that either party “deserves to think seriously about what they deserve to do in nextArray . . . and, in particular, avoid taking steps that could make the stage worse. “
“All efforts will have to go in the direction of resuming dialogue, making more efforts, walking towards others rather than walking opposites,” Zhang said. “Otherwise, I see no option to find a sustainable solution by simply exerting tension”, either “extreme voltage or mild tension. “
Policy 24/7 of the latest news and events.