A professor at a state-run think tank has suggested calling North Korea a "nuclear-armed state," a term which would acknowledge the country's nuke capabilities but not accept the legitimacy of its weapons possession.
"There is a need to draw a clear line between the objective fact on North Korea's nuclear (weapons) possession and the issue of the nuclear-weapon status," professor Jun Bong-geun at the Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security said in his policy paper issued last week.
IFANS is a research arm of the state-run Korea National Diplomatic Academy.
Jun said the new term could differentiate North Korea from the five nuclear-weapons states whose nuclear programs have been legally permitted under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, a global nonproliferation regime. The five countries are the United States, China, Russia, Britain and France.
"I suggest calling countries with nuclear weapons nuclear-armed states," the professor said.
Professor Jun Bong-geun at the Institute of Foreign Affairs and National Security (Yonhap)
South Korea has been wary of calling North Korea a nuclear or nuclear-weapons state for fear that it could imply accepting North Korea as a virtual nuke state and thus change the US' policy goal toward the North from denuclearization to nonproliferation.MOST POPULAR