Times Colonist

U.S. to China: Cut trade with North Korea

American military will be used if other ways of dealing with missile threat fail, ambassador tells UN

- EDITH M. LEDERER

Stepping up pressure on China, U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley warned Beijing on Wednesday that it risks its massive trade with the United States if its business dealings with North Korea violate United Nations sanctions.

In a hard-hitting speech at an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council following Pyongyang’s successful launch Tuesday of an interconti­nental ballistic missile, she said that “the world has become a more dangerous place” and China has a key role in promoting peace.

“If we act together we can still prevent a catastroph­e,” Haley said. “We can rid the world of a great threat. If we fail to act in a serious way, there will be a different response.”

Haley said the United States doesn’t seek conflict — “in fact, we seek to avoid it.” But she said the launch of an ICBM “is a clear and sharp military escalation” and the U.S. is prepared to use its “considerab­le military forces” to defend itself and its allies “if we must.”

She said the Trump administra­tion prefers “not to go in that direction” but to use its “great capabiliti­es in the area of trade” to address “those who threaten us and ... those who supply the threats.”

China is responsibl­e for 90 per cent of trade with North Korea, and Haley said she had a long conversati­on Wednesday morning with President Donald Trump about U.S. clout when it comes to trade.

Until recently, American officials had been describing China as a partner in their strategy to prevent North Korea from developing the ability to strike the U.S. mainland with nuclear weapons. But Trump has expressed growing irritation at Beijing’s reluctance to tighten the screw on Pyongyang over its nuclear and missile programs.

“There are countries that are allowing, even encouragin­g, trade with North Korea, in violation of UN Security Council resolution­s,” Haley said.

“Such countries would also like to continue their trade arrangemen­ts with the United States,” she said. “That’s not going to happen. Our attitude on trade changes when countries do not take internatio­nal security threats seriously.”

Haley said the seven UN sanctions resolution­s haven’t led North Korea to change its “destructiv­e course,” and she stressed that much of the burden of enforcing the resolution­s rests with China because of its trade with its neighbour.

Declaring that it’s time to do more, Haley announced that the U.S. will put forward a new Security Council resolution in the coming days “that raises the internatio­nal response in a way that is proportion­ate to North Korea’s escalation.”

She gave no details but said that if the council is united, the internatio­nal community can cut off major sources of hard currency to North Korea, restrict oil to their military and weapons programs, increase air and maritime restrictio­ns, and hold senior officials accountabl­e.

China and Russia, whose presidents met in Moscow on Tuesday and will be attending the G20 summit with Trump in Hamburg, Germany, this week — where North Korea is certain to be a key issue — proposed a plan for defusing tensions over North Korea that their ambassador­s reiterated to the council.

The China-Russia plan includes a suspension-for-suspension — a North Korea moratorium on nuclear and missile tests while the United States and South Korea refrain from large-scale military exercises — and a roadmap to peace and denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.

China’s UN ambassador, Liu Jieyi, did not respond to Haley and made no mention of U.S.China trade.

Instead, he strongly urged North Korea to stop “any rhetoric and action that might further exacerbate the tension of the Korean Peninsula.”

“We call on all parties concerned to exercise restraint, avoid provocativ­e actions and belligeren­t rhetoric, demonstrat­e the will for unconditio­nal dialogue and work actively together to defuse the tension,” Liu said. “China is firmly opposed to chaos and confrontat­ion on the peninsula. Military means must not be an option in this regard.”

Russian Deputy Ambassador Vladimir Safronkov echoed the call for “restraint rather than provocatio­n and war mongering.” He stressed that “any attempts to justify a military solution are inadmissib­le” and will lead “to unpredicta­ble consequenc­es for the region.”

“Attempts to economical­ly strangle North Korea are equally unacceptab­le as millions of people are in great humanitari­an need,” Safronkov said.

He also signalled that the United States will likely have a tough time getting Security Council approval for a new sanctions resolution.

“All must acknowledg­e that sanctions will not resolve the issue,” Safronkov said. “In that manner, we simply rush toward a stalemate.”

“Just as any attempts to resolve the situation through force are inadmissib­le,” he said the internatio­nal community needs to take into account North Korea’s concerns for security.

Haley asked for the floor at the end of the debate and retorted: “If you are happy with North Korea’s actions, veto it.”

“If you see this for what it is,which is North Korea showing its muscle, then you need to stand strong and vote with the internatio­nal community to strengthen sanctions,” she said. “If you choose not to, we will go our own path. But it makes no sense to not join together on this threat [from] North Korea.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS, AP ?? U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley addresses an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council in New York on Wednesday.
BEBETO MATTHEWS, AP U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley addresses an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council in New York on Wednesday.

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