The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US claims progress on N. Korea standoff

Urges Pyongyang to ‘make a deal’ but says ready to use its US military might to thwart any possible attacks

-

SEOUL: North Korea poses a worldwide threat that requires worldwide action, President Donald Trump said in Seoul yesterday, but insisted “we are making a lot of progress” in reining in the rogue state.

The US leader, standing alongside his South Korean counterpar­t Moon Jae-In, reiterated he was prepared to use the full range of American military might in order to halt Pyongyang’s march towards becoming a full-fledged nuclear power.

But he added: “It makes sense for North Korea to come to the table to make a deal that is good for the people of North Korea and the people of the world.”

“North Korea is a worldwide threat that requires a worldwide action.

“I think we are making a lot of progress,” he said, adding that Chinese President Xi Jinping – whom he has often claimed holds the key to disarming the North – has been “very, very helpful”.

After a relaxed few days in Tokyo, Seoul is a more complicate­d stop for the mercurial US president.

Trump’s relationsh­ip with the liberal-leaning Moon has been cool, and the former real estate magnate has railed at South Korean moves to engage its neighbour – something he has previously labelled “appeasemen­t”.

But he began his diplomatic day vowing to “figure it all out” with “fine gentleman” Moon, despite their difference­s on the nuclear-armed North.

As tensions over Pyongyang’s weapons programme have soared, the US president has traded personal insults and threats of war with North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.

Trump arrived from Japan, where he secured Tokyo’s full support for Washington’s stance that “all options are on the table” regarding Pyongyang, and declaring its nuclear ambitions “a threat to the civilised world and internatio­nal peace and stability”.

He enjoyed three days of nearbroman­ce with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, calling him “wonderful” after a round of golf and describing US-Japan ties as “really extraordin­ary”.

But at Camp Humphreys yesterday, where US forces stationed in the country have moved their headquarte­rs from downtown Seoul, he and Moon sought a rapprochem­ent.

“Ultimately, it will all work out” on North Korea, said Trump. “It always works out. It has to work out.”

And Moon – whose parents were evacuated from the North on a US ship during the Korean War – was abundant in his praise for the United States.

“They say one knows a true friend when one is in need,” he told Trump. “The United States is a true friend who has been with us and has bled with us in our time of need.”

South Korea is rolling out the red carpet for Trump as it seeks messages of assurance about the alliance and US resolve.

But while Trump has threatened Pyongyang with “fire and fury”, Moon is mindful that much of Seoul is within range of the North’s artillery and in an address to parliament last week demanded: “There should be no military action on the peninsula without our prior consent.”

Kim Hyun-Wook, a professor at the Korea National Diplomatic Academy, told AFP that the two allies have “subtle difference­s in their positions” and underlying suspicions about each other.

Citizens views are mixed, with both pro- and anti-Trump demonstrat­ions taking place in downtown Seoul since the weekend, sometimes only a few blocks apart, and a heavy police presence lined the route of his motorcade yesterday.

North Korea – which carried out by far its most powerful nuclear test to date in September – itself welcomed Trump to the region with a rhetorical volley via the ruling party newspaper Rodong Sinmun, calling the US a “thrice-cursed nuclear criminal” and condemning “Trump’s mad remarks”.

Another issue on his agenda is commerce between the US and the South, with Trump saying he had “a terrific meeting scheduled on trade” with Moon.

His administra­tion has caused consternat­ion in Seoul by demanding the renegotiat­ion of the five-year-old US-Korea free trade agreement, which Trump has called a “horrible deal” and a “job killer”.

“It will start working out and working out so we create lots of jobs in the United States, which is one of the many important reasons I am here,” Trump said.

Trump will speak to South Korean MPs today but his visit will not include a trip to the Demilitari­sed Zone dividing the Korean peninsula, with the administra­tion downplayin­g the destinatio­n as “a little bit of a cliche”.

Some observers have fretted that a gaffe by a president given to off-the-cuff remarks could send tensions rising on the peninsula.

“If Trump says anything that can provoke North Korea, it could send military tensions soaring again,” said professor Koo KabWoo from the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul. — AFP

It makes sense for North Korea to come to the table to make a deal that is good for the people of North Korea and the people of the world. North Korea is a worldwide threat that requires a worldwide action. Donald Trump, US President

 ??  ?? Anti-Trump protesters hold placards and shout slogans as they wait for the convoy of US President DonaldTrum­p to make its way past, in Gwanghwamu­n square in central in Seoul. — AFP photo Trump (left) and Moon shake hands before their summit meeting at...
Anti-Trump protesters hold placards and shout slogans as they wait for the convoy of US President DonaldTrum­p to make its way past, in Gwanghwamu­n square in central in Seoul. — AFP photo Trump (left) and Moon shake hands before their summit meeting at...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia