China urges U.S. peace with North Korea to end nuclear threat
"North Korea and the U.S. still have not made peace, they've been in an extended cease-fire," said Fu Ying, who chairs the foreign-affairs committee of China's National People's Congress. "You need to think how to bring an end to the war and enter a more normal relationship."
The U.S. and North Korea agreed to a United Nations-backed armistice in 1953 that ended three years of fighting in the Korean War. The military stalemate split the peninsula along the 38th parallel after the conflict left more than half a million troops from China, the U.S., North and South Korea dead.
Speaking on Saturday at the Munich Security Conference, Fu said that while her country is displeased with the recent nuclear test by North Korea -- formally known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea -- citizens are even more concerned by the U.S. response.
"The Chinese public is also angry about the DPRK nuclear issue but they're even more angry about THAAD," Fu said, referring to the anti-ballistic missile system the U.S. says it deployed to protect against North Korea. "It covers more territory in China than in North and South Korea together."
Source: Bloomberg