Immediately after the ROK-US summit, a North Korean official directly under the head of the US National Intelligence Service (DNI) Haynes revealed an analysis that the US-Korea bilateral de-harmonization strategy was achieved with North Korea's nuclear weapons and that it entered a long-term war through a "front breakthrough" based on its dominance with South Korea.
On the evening of the evening of the 21st, immediately after the ROK-US summit, the North Korean officer of the National Intelligence Committee (NIC) under the Office of the Office of the Director of the US National Intelligence Service (ODNI) in Sydney said, “In the future, North Korea will gradually take more and more coercive actions to show its dominance toward South Korea. It is expected that,” and “North Korea is turning into a long-term war posture due to the deadlock in negotiations with the US,” the Voice of the United States reported on the 25th.
Sailor said, “Expecting external help or compromising is regarded as a betrayal, and internal social control is being reinforced." "The key word for determining whether to take action,” he said at the meeting that day.
"We expect him to increasingly seek to examine how far coercion can work with Chairman Kim Jong-un in the future," Sailer said. South Korea) and said, “It means taking a practical and coordinated approach to weapon development, enduring the pressures of sanctions in the near future, and returning the subject to the highest virtue.” VOA reported.
He prepared for the long-term war with North Korea's "front breakthrough" before the coronavirus. “As Chairman Kim Jong-un declared at the 8th Party Congress for the advancement of nuclear weapons, he clearly communicated that the military imbalance between the two Koreas had been restored since the 1980s.” Explained.
Sailor said on the day that "Even if Kim Yeo-jeong's position is strengthened or suddenly disappeared for several months, the ripple effect has not been particularly noticeable until now," he said on the day in relation to the trend of Kim Yeo-jeong that Korea is paying attention to.
Immediately after the ROK-US summit, South Korean intelligence agencies pointed out that for the first time, military expenditure enhancement was an obstacle to negotiations with North Korea.
Deputy Fellow Kim Bo-mi of the National Security Strategy Research Institute under the National Intelligence Service reported on the 26th in a report on the'Criticism of North Korea's Reinforcement of Korean Conventional Power', "Even if the dialogue between the United States and North Korea finds a solution to denuclearization, it is possible that South Korea's superior conventional ability will slow the denuclearization process "It may lead to difficulties in performing the role of the South Korean government as a middle man between North America by giving the impression that North Korea is taking contradictory actions to cooperate with North Korea while strengthening its defense capabilities." Said.
Researcher Kim said, "It is said that North Korea maintains deterrence with nuclear weapons as the center, but you are well aware that nuclear weapons are not permanently usable weapons against conventional military power." Suggesting that it can be used preemptively may provide an opportunity for North Korea, which is inferior in conventional power, to reinforce the necessity of using a preemptive nuclear power.”
However, he said, "The South Korean government needs to make use of this opportunity (ROK-US summit) to clearly express its intention to North Korea that South Korea's military response cannot precede the establishment of peace on the Korean Peninsula." The operation of the committee is urgent," he said, persuading North Korea by the South Korean government.
Since 2017, the Moon Jae-in administration has led the introduction of advanced weapons in the United States through a strategy to induce pressure on dialogue with the Republican Trump administration through increased armament, and North Korea criticized this.
Haynes National Intelligence Agency (DNI) director, who oversees 17 U.S. intelligence agencies, visited the South Korean DMZ on the 13th just before the ROK-US summit and met the head of the Joint Chiefs of Information Office.
Shortly before his visit to Korea, Director Haynes held a meeting of the heads of the Korea-U.S.-Japan security office in Japan, and Indonesian Ambassador Sung-Kim, who was announced as an envoy to North Korea at the ROK-US summit, announced the first public schedule with the director of the Asian Oceania and the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on the 25th by phone. Discussed, the US State Department said.