Sunday News

China warns ‘cool it’

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NORTH KOREAChina issued a stern warning yesterday to the United States and North Korea, urging them not to push their recriminat­ions to a point of no return and allow war to break out on the Korean Peninsula.

In comments carried by China’s official Xinhua news agency, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said ‘‘storm clouds’’ were gathering, an apparent reference to North Korean preparatio­ns to conduct a new nuclear test and the United States’ deployment of a naval strike force to the waters off the peninsula. In addition, the US military has been conducting large-scale exercises with South Korean forces, drills that the North considers provocativ­e.

‘‘The United States and South Korea and North Korea are engaging in tit for tat, with swords drawn and bows bent,’’ Wang said at a news conference after meeting visiting French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, Xinhua reported. ‘‘We urge all parties to refrain from inflammato­ry or threatenin­g statements or deeds to prevent irreversib­le damage to the situation on the Korean Peninsula.’’

Trump administra­tion officials describe the situation as more dangerous than in the past, both because of the progress North Korea has made in its nuclear and missile programmes and because of the hostility on both sides. But US officials said no decision has been made about how to respond to any new test - nuclear or ballistic - by North Korea.

In the event of either a nuclear or a missile test, the US military is likely at a minimum to conduct a show of force, potentiall­y reposition­ing American forces within South Korea, flying longrange bombers over the southern part of the peninsula or moving ships around in nearby waters.

North Korea accused President Donald Trump of ‘‘making trouble’’ with his ‘‘aggressive’’ tweets, amid concerns that tensions between the two REUTERS countries could escalate into military action.

And the North Korean army threatened to annihilate US military bases in South Korea and the presidenti­al palace in Seoul in response to what it called Trump’s ‘‘maniacal military provocatio­ns’’.

Tensions have been steadily mounting in recent weeks as North Korea prepared for what it is calling a ‘‘big’’ event to mark the anniversar­y of its founder’s birthday yesterday, while the Trump administra­tion warns that all options are on the table.

Vice President Mike Pence arrives in Seoul today on the first leg of an Asia tour, and he will doubtless underscore Washington’s strong alliances with South Korea and Japan and their determinat­ion to stop North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme.

The United States has sent an aircraft carrier strike group to the Korean Peninsula region.

Wang warned that ‘‘no-one will win’’ if hostilitie­s escalate. ‘‘It is not the one who espouses harsher rhetoric or raises a bigger fist that will win.’’

He also indicated that China is willing to broker a resumption of ‘‘dialogue,’’ whether ‘‘official or unofficial’’.

North Korea’s Institute for Disarmamen­t and Peace said that it was the United States pushing the Korean Peninsula, ‘‘the world’s biggest hotspot,’’ to the brink of war by bringing back a naval strike group.

‘‘This has created a dangerous situation in which a thermonucl­ear war may break out any moment on the peninsula and pose a serious threat to the world’s peace and security,’’ the statement said.

North Korea has a habit of fuelling tensions to increase the rewards it might extract from the outside world if it desists. Previously, the North has agreed to return to denucleari­sation talks in return for aid or the easing of sanctions.

Trump is tearing up that old playbook, analysts said.

‘‘This approach to North Korea is relatively new,’’ said James Kim of the Asan Institute of Policy Studies in Seoul. ‘‘The approach in the past has been very calculated.’’

That has gone out the window with talk about military options, he said. ‘‘We always knew all these options were there, but noone was bold enough to go down that path. It’s a new approach.’’

Some in Beijing are noticing the shift, too.

‘‘Trump is also willing to show he is different. Bombing Syria helps him to show that,’’ it said.

But North Korea could prove different if it calls Trump’s bluff and conducts another nuclear test, the paper said. ‘‘Trump just took the office; if he loses to Pyongyang, he would feel like he had lost some prestige.’’

Meanwhile, the Japanese government is taking precaution­s of its own. Its National Security Council has discussed how to evacuate the roughly 60,000 Japanese nationals living in South Korea and how to deal with a potential influx of North Koreans, according to multiple local reports. These plans include sifting out spies or soldiers who might be among the refugees. Washington Post REUTERS

 ??  ?? Military vehicles carry missiles during a parade marking the 105th birth anniversar­y of North Korea’s founding father, Kim Il Sung, in Pyongyang, yesterday.
Military vehicles carry missiles during a parade marking the 105th birth anniversar­y of North Korea’s founding father, Kim Il Sung, in Pyongyang, yesterday.
 ??  ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves to people attending a military parade in Pyongyang yesterday.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves to people attending a military parade in Pyongyang yesterday.

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