The Phnom Penh Post

United States pledges to force N Korea back to nuclear talks

- Thomas Watkins

THE United States pledged onWednesda­y to step up sanctions to force North Korea to resume dialogue over its nuclear program, but said it was not looking to bring Kim Jong-un’s regime to its knees.

After briefing senators at the White House, top US officials said President Donald Trump also aimed to pursue diplomatic measures with allies and regional partners.

“We are engaging responsibl­e members of the internatio­nal community to increase pressure on [North Korea] in order to convince the regime to deescalate and return to the path of dialogue,” read a statement from Pentagon chief Jim Mattis, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Director of National Intelligen­ce Dan Coats.

Earlier, Admiral Harry Harris, who heads the Pacific Command, welcomed recent moves by Beijing to defuse soaring tensions between Pyongyang and Washington, and suggested a non-military solution remained the preferred outcome.

“It’s critical that we’re guided by a strong sense of resolve, both privately and publicly, both diplomatic­ally and militarily,” Harris said in Washington. “All options are on the table. We want to bring Kim Jong-un to his senses, not to his knees.”

During a White House luncheon with UN Security Council ambassador­s Monday, Trump “was very clear that he will be the president who will deal with” North Korea and that military action remains an option, a senior diplomat said.

National security adviser HR McMaster told the 15 ambassador­s “there would be a military CarlVinson, solution even if they don’t want to do it,” the diplomat said.

The message was “ideally we do this peacefully and politicall­y, which means through China. But if that doesn’t work, there is another plan, which is through the United States,” said the diplomat, who asked not to be named.

Missile-defence system

Separately, a senior administra­tion official said that the United States is considerin­g adding North Korea to its list of countries that are designated as “state sponsors of terrorism”.

US troops in South Korea began on Wednesday deploying a contentiou­s anti-missile system in South Korea that has infuriated China.

The Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system is being set up on a former golf course in the southern county of Seongju, and its arrival was met by hundreds of protesters, some of whom clashed with police.

Harris said the THAAD system “will be operationa­l in the coming days”.

China fears THAAD will weaken its own ballistic capabiliti­es and says it upsets the regional security balance.

Harris also said the Pentagon should weigh whether to install missile intercepto­rs on Hawaii, which could be one of the first parts of the United States in range of an improved North Korean missile, in addition to existing intercepto­rs in California and Alaska.

Pentagon officials have stressed to Trump that there are no easy options for military interventi­on in North Korea.

Senator Tammy Duckworth, a former US military helicopter pilot who lost both legs in combat in Iraq, was dismissive of what she and colleagues heard at the White House briefing on North Korea.

“I could’ve gotten all that informatio­n by reading a newspaper,” she told CNN. “It felt more like a dog and pony show to me than anything else.”

Washington has deployed an aircraft carrier strike group to the peninsula amid signs the North could be preparing for a sixth nuclear test.

The deployment drew widespread derision after it emerged that instead of steaming toward the peninsula, the ships actually headed in the opposite direction for a few days to train with the Australian navy.

Harris said the USS Carl Vinson strike group was now in the Philippine Sea just east of Okinawa, “in striking range and power projection range of North Korea if called upon to do that”.

Congressma­n Mac Thornberry, who heads the House Armed Services Committee, said there is “tremendous confidence” among administra­tion officials on dealing with North Korea.

In Pyongyang’s latest display of its military capabiliti­es, Kim oversaw the country’s largesteve­r firing drill to mark the founding anniversar­y of its military, state-run media said on Wednesday.

Seoul held a large annual drill of its own, involving some 100 artillery pieces, 90 armoured vehicles and 50 aircraft, as well as 2,000 South Korean and US troops, the Defense Ministry said.

UN rights visit

Seperately, North Korea agreed yesterday to host a UN rights expert for the first time, granting access next week to the special rapporteur on disabled people’s rights, the world body said.

Catalina Devandas-Aguilar is scheduled to arrive in the isolated nation on Wednesday following an invitation from Pyongyang, the UN rights office said in a statement.

Her visit “will be the first ever to the country by an independen­t expert designated by the UN Human Rights Council”, the statement said.

The rights council has accused North Korea of committing crimes against humanity and detaining up to 120,000 people in brutal prison camps.

Devandas-Aguilar said the upcoming visit marked a important chance to study the situation in the country, with a particular focus on children living with disabiliti­es.

 ?? US NAVY/SEAN CASTELLANO/AFP ?? The aircraft carrier USS seen here on Wednesday, is now ‘in striking range’ of North Korea. The US has said it is looking to bring the hermit country back to the negotiatin­g table.
US NAVY/SEAN CASTELLANO/AFP The aircraft carrier USS seen here on Wednesday, is now ‘in striking range’ of North Korea. The US has said it is looking to bring the hermit country back to the negotiatin­g table.

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