Arab Times

Pence to S. Korea, Japan amid North Korea threat

Bid to reassure allies

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WASHINGTON, April 15, (AP): President Donald Trump has labeled North Korea a “problem” country and says it will be dealt with through a broad — and vague — set of options. It may be up to his vice- president, Mike Pence, to fill in the details when he arrives in Asia.

Pence will be diving into a tense standoff along the Korean Peninsula with visits to South Korea and Japan beginning Sunday. His travels to the Asia-Pacific region come amid indication­s that North Korea is potentiall­y preparing its sixth nuclear test in a decade or a significan­t missile launch, such as its first flight test of an interconti­nental ballistic missile.

Trump, who has proven to be unpredicta­ble on foreign policy, has responded to the recent concerns over North Korea with a swagger that suggests a new, tougher stance. Asked about North Korea this week, he told reporters: “North Korea is a problem. The problem will be taken care of.” He has repeatedly declared that if China, North Korea’s dominant trading partner, isn’t willing to do more to squeeze the North, the US might take the matter into its own hands.

The remarks came with a show of military might, as an aircraft carrier head to waters off the Korean Peninsula. However, military officials have said the US doesn’t intend to use military force against North Korea in response to either a nuclear test or a missile launch.

Tough rhetoric aside, Trump’s advisers have chosen a policy that appears to hew to that of the Obama administra­tion.

After a two-month policy review, officials settled on a policy dubbed “maximum pressure and engagement,” US officials said Friday. The administra­tion’s immediate emphasis, the officials said, will be on increasing pressure on Pyongyang with the help of Beijing.

The officials weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the results of the policy review and requested anonymity.

Pence

Policy

Pence is tasked with explaining the policy in meetings with leaders in South Korea and Japan at the start of a 10-day tour that will include stops in Indonesia and Australia.

Part of his mission will be to reassure allies in South Korea and Japan that the US will defend them against North Korean aggression without acting in a way that might tip the region into open conflict.

“The message, I think, is going to be about vigilance and deterrence,” said Victor Cha, the Korea chair at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. He said Pence will try to balance reassuranc­e with a willingnes­s to respond if North Korea acts. “The United States wants to project a more muscular image when it comes to the policy so some unpredicta­bility serves that cause.”

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has pointed to nuclear weapons as the foundation of his national defense strategy and has openly sought a nuclear weapon that could strike the continenta­l US Analysts have said commercial satellite images from recent weeks indicate increased activity around the nuclear test site in northern North Korea.

North Korea has a history of marking significan­t dates with a show of military force, and Pence’s arrival will come a day after the country celebrates its most important holiday on Saturday, the 105th birth anniversar­y of the country’s late founder, Kim Il Sung, the grandfathe­r of its current leader.

The US, which last week acted unilateral­ly in ordering a cruise missile strike on Syria, has recently dispatched what Trump called an “armada,” including an aircraft carrier, into waters off the Korean Peninsula. Thousands of US and South Korean troops, tanks and other weaponry were also deployed last month in their biggest-ever joint military exercises, which prompted North Korea to issue routine threats of attacks on its rival if they show signs of aggression.

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