North Korea Condemns US Missile Sale Approval to South Korea
North Korea's foreign ministry condemned a US decision to approve the sale of advanced air-to-air missiles and related equipment to South Korea, warning the move would worsen tensions on the Korean peninsula, state media KCNA said on Saturday. The ministry's director-general for external policy said in a statement carried ‌by KCNA ‌that military cooperation between Washington ‌and ⁠Seoul was being "systematically strengthened" despite ⁠what it called international concern over rising tensions in and around the peninsula. The official cited the US State Department's approval of a nearly $300 million foreign military sale of advanced air-to-air missiles and related ⁠equipment to South Korea as ‌the latest example. "US ‌arms exports are war exports," the official said, adding ‌that North Korea would continue strengthening ‌its self-defensive deterrent to maintain the regional balance of power. North Korea routinely criticizes US-South Korea military cooperation as preparation for war. It separately criticized ‌South Korea's President Lee Jae Myung over a joint statement with ⁠European Union ⁠leaders during a visit to Europe, which described North Korea's status as a nuclear weapons state and its military cooperation with Russia as "illegal", KCNA said on Saturday. KCNA said it was a violation of North Korea's sovereignty, South Korea had shown there could be no "peaceful coexistence" between the two Koreas and that Pyongyang would continue to regard the South as a hostile state.