The Free Press Journal

Military action against N Korea an option: US

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Military action by the US against nuclear-armed North Korea is an “option on the table” if the threat from the rogue regime escalates, Washington’s top diplomat Rex Tillerson said on Friday. The strong comments from the secretary of state, in Asia for his first foray into crisis management, appear to signal a sea change in American policy towards the isolated country.

Tillerson’s tour comes after a missile launch last week that Pyongyang described as a drill for an attack on US bases in Japan.

The US has 28,000 troops stationed in South Korea to defend it from the North, but the capital Seoul is within range of Pyongyang’s artillery and analysts believe any conflict could risk rapid escalation and heavy casualties.

Even so, Tillerson said the US’s “strategic patience” had ended — the sta nce of the administra­tion under Barack Obama.

Under that policy, the US ruled out engaging the North until it made a tangible commitment to denucleari­sation, hoping internal stresses in the isolated country would bring about change.

“We are exploring a new range of diplomatic, security and economic measures. All options are on the table,” Tillerson told reporters at a joint press conference with his South Korean counterpar­t Yun Byung-Se.

“Certainly we do not want to, for things to get to military conflict,” he said. “If they elevate the threat of their weapons programme to a level that we believe require action, then, that option’s on the table.”

North Korea has the ambition to become a nuclear power, saying it needs to be able to defend itself, and conducted its first undergroun­d atomic test in 2006. Four more test blasts have followed, two of them last year.

Tillerson’s remarks came a day after he said in Tokyo that 20 years of efforts to denucleari­se the North had “failed” and promised a new approach, without giving specifics.

The UN as imposed multiple sets of sanctions on the North over its nuclear and missile programmes, but its main diplomatic protector and trade partner China is accused of not fully enforcing them.

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