The House Foreign Affairs Committee approved the bill hours after Japan, a US ally that has usually championed a hard line on North Korea, unexpectedly eased sanctions after rare talks between the arch-enemies.
The House bill would create a blacklist of officials judged to be involved in human rights abuses after a damning report by a UN commission likened abuses by Kim Jong-Un's regime to those under Nazi Germany.
While the United States already maintains sweeping sanctions against North Korea, the proposed law would seek to make the totalitarian state radioactive for banks from third countries by asking the Treasury Department to consider designating Pyongyang a money-laundering concern.
Hard-up Pyongyang responded furiously, refusing to comply with a denuclearization deal until it received the funds.
The sanctions bill would also reimpose strict restrictions on export licenses that were loosened in 2008 when then-president George W. Bush controversially took North Korea off a list of state sponsors of terrorism as he searched for an elusive final denuclearization agreement.
"It has been six years since North Korea walked away from the negotiating table. The only thing that has changed since 2008 is that North Korea is closer to miniaturizing a nuclear warhead," said Representative Ed Royce, the chairman of the House committee.
Representative Tulsi Gabbard, a member of President Barack Obama's Democratic Party, said that North Korea's growing missile program posed a direct threat to her state of Hawaii.
"Strategic patience -- the time for that has come and gone," Gabbard said, referring to the stated policy at the start of the Obama administration of waiting for North Korea to come forward before any changes to US policy.
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