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North Korea threatens to 'wipe out' U.S.

Kim Jong-il close to naming son as successor: report

Last Updated: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 | 11:35 AM ET

In this undated photo released earlier this week by Korean Central News Agency, North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, right, inspects the command of the 7th Infantry Division of the Korean People's Army at an undisclosed location in North Korea. In this undated photo released earlier this week by Korean Central News Agency, North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, right, inspects the command of the 7th Infantry Division of the Korean People's Army at an undisclosed location in North Korea. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service/Associated Press)

North Korea threatened on Wednesday to "wipe out" the United States in the event of a new war on the Korean Peninsula, as international observers watched for signs the regime would perform new missile tests in the coming days.

The warning came as a U.S. navy destroyer was tracking a North Korean ship suspected of attempting to transport illicit weapons to Burma. The pursuit is seen as the first test of sanctions passed by the UN Security Council as a response to Pyongyang's underground nuclear test in late May.

North Korea has said it would consider an interception to be a declaration of war. On Wednesday, it accused the U.S. of seeking to provoke another Korean War.

"If the U.S. imperialists start another war, the army and people of Korea will … wipe out the aggressors on the globe once and for all," the official Korean Central News Agency said.

The Korean War ended in a truce in 1953, not a peace treaty, leaving the peninsula in state of war.

In recent months, Pyongyang has sparked the fury of the international community by shunning six-party negotiations and resuming its nuclear program in defiance of the UN Security Council.

Meanwhile, reports emerged in South Korea that the North's leader, Kim Jong-il, appointed his son, Kim Jong-un, to head the country's spy agency to prepare him to inherit the leadership.

Seoul's Dong-a Ilbo newspaper reported that Kim ordered senior officials at the State Security Department in March to "uphold" his youngest son as head of the agency, while doling out foreign-made luxury cars to the officials as gifts.

The 67-year-old Kim reportedly suffered a stroke last year and has appeared gaunt in recently released photos, prompting further speculation about his health and the stability of the regime.

With files from The Associated Press
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