And it warned that "tough counteraction will be boldly taken against the White House, the Pentagon and the whole US mainland".
Despite being
accused by the US of being behind the recent Sony hacking, the secretive state
continues to insist it had no involvement.
But Pyongyang
praised the "surprisingly sophisticated, destructive and threatening cyber
warfare" inflicted on the company, as the movie "dared to hurt the
dignity of the supreme leadership of the DPRK".
Meanwhile,
South Korea has claimed one of its nuclear power plants fell victim to hacking,
but stressed no reactors were affected. The developed country has not
implicated North Korea in the attack.
The
Interview, which included the fictional assassination of leader Kim Jong-Un,
was pulled from cinemas before its release after hackers threatened to target
those who went to see the film.
A story from
the Korean Central News Agency said: "The Interview is undesirable and
reactionary. It should not be allowed in any country or any region. The movie
has a story agitating a vicious and dastardly method of assassinating a
legitimate head of state.
"DPRK is
praising the 'guardians of peace' for their righteous deed which prevented in
advance the evil cycle of retaliation – terrorism sparks terrorism."
The Pyongyang
government claims it is taking a stand "on the US gangster-like behaviour
against it" – and alleges it has clear evidence that American authorities
were deeply involved in the movie's production, as it would be "effective
propaganda against North Korea".
Its statement
said: "The facts glaringly show that the US is the chief culprit of
terrorism as it has loudly called for combating terrorism everywhere in the
world, but schemed behind the scenes to produce and distribute movies inciting
it.
"Nothing
is a more serious miscalculation than guessing that just a single movie
production company is involved. Our target is all the citadels of the US
imperialists who earned the bitterest grudge of Koreans.
"The US
should reflect on its evil doings that put itself in such a trouble, apologise
to the Koreans and other people of the world, and should not dare pull up
others." North Korea's only significant ally, China, condemned the use of
cyber-attacks and cyber-terrorism early on Monday – but stopped short of
criticising the state.
President
Obama, along with his advisers, is weighing up how to punish North Korea. The
FBI concluded that Pyongyang was behind the Sony hacking – the first time that
the US has accused another country of orchestrating such a significant
cyber-attack. David Boies, Sony's lawyer, has insisted the embattled
entertainment company still plans to release its controversial film - but
warned the hack was "a national security problem" and the US
government needed to take the lead.
Skynews
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