The Telegram (St. John's)

U.S. denies plan for ‘bloody nose’ strike on North Korea

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The United States doesn’t have a “bloody nose’’ strategy for North Korea, senators of both parties and a Trump administra­tion official said Thursday, rejecting claims the U.S. wants to strike the North’s nuclear program in a way that avoids an all-out war.

The harmonized message could quell speculatio­n that President Donald Trump is contemplat­ing limited military action to demonstrat­e U.S. resolve toward North Korea without provoking a wider conflict. Such a strategy would be widely seen as dangerous given the North’s capability to inflict a devastatin­g retaliatio­n on U.S. ally South Korea.

A senior White House official, at a briefing Wednesday, told lawmakers no such approach has been adopted, Sens. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., and James Risch, R-idaho, said at a Senate hearing Thursday. An administra­tion official who was testifying confirmed their accounts.

The White House had “made it very clear there is no bloody nose strategy for a strike against North Korea,’’ Shaheen told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which was considerin­g the nomination of Susan Thornton, Trump’s choice to be the top diplomat for East Asia.

“We were told clearly by administra­tion people about as high up as it gets that there is no such thing as a ‘bloody nose’ strategy, that they’ve never talked about, they’ve never considered it, they’ve never used that term, and it’s not something

that that people ought to be talking about,’’ Risch said.

Thornton confirmed the administra­tion’s policy remains one of “maximum pressure’’ through economic sanctions to get North Korea to negotiate on eliminatin­g up its nuclear weapons. At the same time, the U.S. is keeping military options on the table.

“Our preference is to achieve denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula through a diplomatic settlement, but we will reach this goal one way or another,’’ she said.

Trump has pledged to prevent North Korea from perfecting a nuclear-tipped, long-range missile that could strike the U.S. mainland. The North’s rapid tempo of weapons tests in the past year has led the CIA director to say the country may only be months away from the target.

The “bloody nose’’ moniker emerged in December, when a British newspaper, The Daily

Telegraph, cited unnamed sources saying the White House had “dramatical­ly’’ stepped up preparatio­n for a military solution because diplomacy was not working.

Victor Cha, a Washington­based Korea expert who had long been regarded as Trump’s choice to become U.S. ambassador to South Korea, referred to it in a commentary two weeks ago and said some administra­tion officials were considerin­g preventive military action against North Korea.

Cha warned of thousands of Americans being put at risk in South Korea and the start a nuclear war. It wasn’t clear whether Cha was passed over as ambassador because of policy difference­s with the White House or problems with his security clearance.

Darryl Kimball, executive director of the Washington-based Arms Control Associatio­n, said he was not reassured by the senators’ comments.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? President Donald Trump walks from the Diplomatic Room of the White House, in Washington, Thursday.
AP PHOTO President Donald Trump walks from the Diplomatic Room of the White House, in Washington, Thursday.

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