Journal Pioneer

Trump seeks billions of dollars to counter North Korean missiles

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The Trump administra­tion is seeking nearly $6 billion to pay for urgent missile defence improvemen­ts to counter the threat from North Korea, increased U.S. troop levels in Afghanista­n and fast repairs to Navy ships in the Asia-Pacific theatre.

The budget request delivered to Capitol Hill on Monday coincided with tough words for Pyongyang from President Donald Trump during the first stop of his lengthy Asia trip. Trump sought to ratchet up pressure on North Korea by refusing to rule out eventual military action and declaring that the United States “will not stand’’ for North Korea menacing America or its Asian allies. Trump denounced North Korea as “a threat to the civilized’’ for pursuing nuclear weapons and the developmen­t of the long-range ballistic missiles to deliver them.

The spending request designates $4 billion of the total to support “additional efforts to detect, defeat, and defend against any North Korean use of ballistic missiles against the United States, its deployed forces, allies, or partners,’’ according to the document. That includes current and projected threats to the U.S. homeland, Guam, South Korea and Japan. A large chunk of the money would be used for the constructi­on of an additional ground-based intercepto­r field at Fort Greely, Alaska; the initial procuremen­t of 20 new ground-based intercepto­rs; ship-based missiles; and intercepto­rs for the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defence, or THAAD, a U.S. mobile antimissil­e system.

Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., said Monday that “all the name calling and all the chest beating’’ by Trump isn’t helpful and may actually be increasing the risks of confrontat­ion with North Korea. Van Hollen said Trump’s rhetoric also serves the interests of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un by elevating his status “in an internatio­nal yelling match’’ with the U.S. president. Van Hollen is co-sponsoring bipartisan sanctions legislatio­n that would target Chinese banks and other financial institutio­ns found to be assisting North Korea in evading existing financial penalties. The sanctions bill, which the Senate Banking Committee will consider on Tuesday, also would punish companies that knowingly import coal, iron, lead and seafood products from North Korea. Those goods are estimated to be worth more than $1 billion _ about one-third of the country’s estimated $3 billion in exports in 2016.

Roughly $1.2 billion in the request would allow the Defence Department to deploy an additional 3,500 U.S. troops to Afghanista­n as part of Trump’s new strategy for the country where the U.S. has been fighting since 2001, according to the budget request. Trump in August unveiled his new plan for the 16-year Afghan war, declaring that American troops would “fight to win’’ by attacking enemies, “crushing’’ al-Qaida and preventing terrorist attacks against Americans.

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