U.S. House passes defense bill with amendment on N.K. sanctions

Photo: None
WASHINGTON. KAZINFORM - The U.S. House of Representatives on Friday passed a defense bill amended to include provisions for the strengthening of sanctions against North Korea, Yonhap reports.

The National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2020, which approvesUS$733 billion in spending and outlines defense policy, passed the House220-197. It will need to be reconciled with a Senate version before beingsigned into law by President Donald Trump.

The bill also includes an amendment earmarking $10 million for theverification of North Korea's denuclearization, and restricts any drawdown ofU.S. troops in South Korea from the current level of 28,500.

Marking the first such action by Congress, the bill also includes anamendment calling for a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War.

The text calls for secondary sanctions on financial institutions thatconduct business with North Korea in violation of existing sanctions onPyongyang. The measures would especially affect Chinese banks.

The amendment is named the Otto Warmbier Banking Restrictions InvolvingNorth Korea Act after the American college student who died in 2017 followingmore than a year of detention in the North.

The Senate's version of the NDAA, which passed in June, contains a similaramendment.

To restrict the drawdown of troops in South Korea, the bill prohibits theuse of funds for such purposes until 90 days after the U.S. defense secretarycertifies to Congress that the move is in the interest of U.S. nationalsecurity and commensurate with the reduction in threat posed by North Korea'sconventional military forces.

The defense secretary is also required to certify that U.S. allies,including South Korea and Japan, have been «appropriately» consultedregarding such a reduction.

The amendment calling for an end to the Korean War was led by Reps. RoKhanna (D-CA) and Brad Sherman (D-CA).

It recognizes that diplomacy is essential to achieve denuclearization onthe Korean Peninsula and that a formal end to the war is critical toward thatgoal.

The three-year conflict ended in a truce, not a peace treaty, with the U.S.fighting alongside South Korea against the North.

«It's a clear sign that the American people want an end to the oldestU.S. conflict, and that ending decades of hostilities with a peace agreement isthe only way to resolve the nuclear crisis,» said Christine Ahn, executivedirector of Women Cross DMZ, which advocated for the amendment's passage.

The U.S. and North Korea are expected to resume negotiations in the comingdays on the dismantlement of the regime's nuclear weapons program in exchangefor various concessions, including sanctions relief.

A political declaration ending the Korean War has been reported to be apossible element of any deal.

Currently reading