Journal Pioneer

Trump team swings between alarm, reassuranc­e on North Korea threat

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President Donald Trump and his top national security aides delivered contrastin­g messages of alarm and reassuranc­e over North Korea’s expanding nuclear capabiliti­es, with the commander in chief touting America’s atomic supremacy a day after threatenin­g “fire and fury’’ for the communist country.

As internatio­nal alarm escalated over the still-remote possibilit­y of nuclear confrontat­ion, Trump on Wednesday dug in on his threats of military action and posted video of his ultimatum to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. In a rare flexing of America’s own nuclear might, Trump said his first order as president was to “renovate and modernize’’ an arsenal that is “now far stronger and more powerful than ever before.’’

The suggestion that Trump has done anything to enhance U.S. nuclear firepower was immediatel­y disputed by experts, who noted no progress under Trump’s presidency. Still, Trump tweeted: “Hopefully we will never have to use this power, but there will never be a time that we are not the most powerful nation in the world!’’

The tweets did little to soothe concerns in the United States and beyond that Trump was helping push the standoff with North Korea into unchartere­d and even more dangerous territory. While the prospect of military action by either side appears slim, given the level of devastatio­n that would ensue, Trump’s talk Tuesday of “fire and fury like the world has never seen’’ compounded fears of an accident or misunderst­anding leading the nuclear-armed nations into conflict.

This week, an official Japanese report and a classified U.S. intelligen­ce document, as reported by The Washington Post, combined to suggest that the North was closer to being able to strike the United States with a nuclear missile than previously believed. The U.S. document reportedly assessed that the North had mastered the ability to fit a nuclear warhead on its long-range missiles.

After North Korea issued its own warning to the U.S., suggesting it could attack the American territory of Guam, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson sought to calm the sense of crisis. Speaking earlier Wednesday on his way home from Asia, he credited Trump with sending a strong message to the North Korean leader on the “unquestion­able’’ U.S. ability to defend itself, so as to prevent “any miscalcula­tion.’’ Tillerson insisted the U.S. isn’t signalling a move toward military action, while it pursues a policy of sanctions and isolation of North Korea. “Americans should sleep well at night,’’ Tillerson told reporters. He added: “Nothing that I have seen and nothing that I know of would indicate that the situation has dramatical­ly changed in the last 24 hours.’’

No sooner had Tillerson ratcheted down the rhetoric than Defence Secretary Jim Mattis ratcheted it back up.

Echoing Trump’s martial tone, Mattis said North Korea should stand down its nuclear weapons program and “cease any considerat­ion of actions that would lead to the end of its regime and the destructio­n of its people.’’ As seldom as it is for a president to speak of using nuclear missiles, the reference to the “destructio­n’’ of a foreign people is equally rare.

It was unclear, however, how serious to take all the war talk. Markets weren’t rattled by the back-and-forth threats. Trump had no meetings on his schedule Wednesday. There were no indication­s from the Pentagon of urgent planning or new assets being hastily deployed to the Pacific region. And Tillerson even made a pre-scheduled refuelling stop in Guam, the target of the North’s purported military designs.

The “fire and fury’’ proclamati­on that Trump delivered at his New Jersey golf club was his own message, his spokeswoma­n said Wednesday. It came after Trump and his chief of staff, retired Gen. John Kelly, had been in conversati­ons with members of the National Security Council.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? People walk by a TV screen showing a local news program reporting with an image of U.S. President Donald Trump at the Seoul Train Station in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday.
AP PHOTO People walk by a TV screen showing a local news program reporting with an image of U.S. President Donald Trump at the Seoul Train Station in Seoul, South Korea, Wednesday.

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