The assertion comes as the US is considering putting the North back on its list of terror sponsors. But the vitriolic outrage over the alleged plan to assassinate Kim last month is also being doled out with an unusually big dollop of retaliation threats, raising a familiar question: What on Earth is going on in Pyongyang?
North Korea's state-run media announced today that an ethnic Korean man with US citizenship was "intercepted" two days ago by authorities for unspecified hostile acts against the country. He was identified as Kim Hak Song, an employee of the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology.
What, if anything, the arrests have to the alleged plot is unknown. But they bring to four the number of US citizens now known to be in custody in the North.
The others are Otto Warmbier, serving a 15-year prison term with hard labor for alleged anti-state acts he allegedly tried to steal a propaganda banner at his tourist hotel and Kim Dong Chul, serving a 10-year term with hard labor for alleged espionage.
According to state media reports that began Friday, he is a Pyongyang resident who was "ideologically corrupted and bribed" by the CIA and South Korea's National Intelligence Service while working in the timber industry in Siberia in 2014. The Russian far east is one of the main places where North Korean laborers are allowed to work abroad.
The reports say Kim his full name has not been provided was converted into a "terrorist full of repugnance and revenge against the supreme leadership" of North Korea and collaborated in an elaborate plot to assassinate Kim Jong Un at a series of events, including a major military parade, that were held last month.
Kim Jong Un attended the military parade on April 15 and made several other appearances around that time to mark the anniversary of his late grandfather's birthday.
The initial reports of the plot concluded with a vow by the Ministry of State Security to "ferret out to the last one" the organizers, conspirators and followers of the plot, which it called "state-sponsored terrorism."
It's anyone's guess what a "Korean-style" attack might entail.
North Korea is known for its loud and belligerent rhetoric in the face of what it deems to be threats to its leadership, and the reference to ferreting out anyone involved in the plot could suggest not only action abroad but possible purges or crackdowns at home.
"I wonder if Kim Jong Un has become paranoid about the influence Americans are having on North Koreans, and about the possibility of US action against him," said Bruce Bennett, a senior defense analyst and North Korea expert at the RAND Corporation.
Tensions between North Korea and its chief adversaries the US and South Korea have been rising over Pyongyang's nuclear and missile programs, as well as joint US-South Korean military exercises that include training for a possible "decapitation strike" to kill the North's senior leaders.
Bennett noted that such training has been included and expanded upon in annual wargames hosted by South Korea, which were bigger than ever this year.
The wargames, called Key Resolve/Foal Eagle, just finished, without any signs of North Korean retaliation.
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