Seoul urges Pyongyang to ‘immediately’ stop sabre-rattling as tensions simmer

South Korea on Thursday called on North to “immediately stop” its belligerent rhetoric amid a recent spike in tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

North Korea should stop demonstrating threats of exerting force immediately and respond to Seoul’s repeated calls for dialogue aimed at easing tensions in the region, the South Korean Foreign Ministry said on Thursday.

On Saturday, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un threatened to take decisive steps against the United States, including “physical action,” after the UN Security Council passed new economic sanctions against his country. Rhetoric in the conflict heated up this week after US President Donald Trump warned North Korea it would face “fire and fury” if it did not stop making threats against Washington. Pyongyang responded by threatening to launch four ballistic missiles toward the US Pacific territory of Guam, which hosts several military bases.

“The North’s recent threatening words have gone too much and run squarely against with the consensus contained in the statement issued after the ARF [ASEAN Regional Forum]. It should stop them immediately,” ministerial spokesman Cho June-hyuck said during a regular press briefing, as quoted by the Yonhap news agency.

The spokesman added that Pyongyang should make the right choice and come on the path toward denuclearization.

Earlier in the day, South Korean authorities said Seoul would act against the North if the latter continued its provocations.