Pompeo talks up North Korea invasion
UNITED STATES: President Donald Trump’s nomination for America’s top diplomat yesterday said he could imagine the US launching a ground invasion of North Korea.
Mike Pompeo, proposed as the new secretary of state, said the US might at some point have to ‘‘move past diplomacy’’ to stop the regime’s nuclear programme.
However, Pompeo stressed that he did not favour ‘‘regime change’’ and wanted to solve the world’s crises with diplomatic rather than military means.
During a grilling by a Senate committee, Pompeo said he had been interviewed by the Russian election meddling investigation, but declined to answer questions about what was discussed. He said he would not quit if Robert Mueller, the special counsel leading the Russia investigation, was sacked by Trump.
Pompeo declined to say that Trump should pull out of the Iran nuclear deal unilaterally, and pledged to counter Russia’s attempts to undermine Western democracy.
He also promised to fill gaps in the US State Department that have been left open since Trump took office, warning that diplomats had become demoralised.
Pompeo, currently the CIA director, needs to be approved by the Senate before he can replace Rex Tillerson, the former secretary of state who was fired by Trump. Pompeo has been seen as a foreign policy hawk on issues such as Iran and North Korea. The former Republican congressman and ex-captain in the US Army has been painted by political opponents as a ‘‘yes man’’ to Trump.
During his Senate appearance, Pompeo attempted to push back on his ‘‘hardliner’’ image while echoing many of Trump’s foreign policy positions.
In an opening statement, Pompeo said he had ‘‘no discomfort with directness’’. He also said he was ‘‘not afraid of getting my hands dirty’’, did not ‘‘hold grudges’’, and preferred to thrash out differences face to face.
On policy, Pompeo insisted he did not favour regime change in North Korea, where leader Kim Jong-un has continued to develop nuclear weapons since Trump took office, but did not rule out military action.
One senator asked whether there was ‘‘any circumstance where a ground invasion of North Korea would be necessary in order to rid that country of its nuclear weapons programme’’.
Pompeo responded: ‘‘I suppose I could hypothesise such situations, so I’ll answer your question as could I imagine one? Yes, yes, senator, I could.
‘‘I mean, I suppose it’s possible that we would get to the condition . . . where Kim Jong-un was directly threatening and we had information about his activities. Yes, I can imagine times when America would need to take a response that moved past diplomacy.’’
On Iran, Pompeo said there was ‘‘no evidence’’ that Iran was not in compliance with the terms of a nuclear deal struck by Barack Obama – raising hopes the agreement could still be kept by Trump.
He came under tough questioning over his past political stances, refusing to give a yes or no answer to whether he though gay sex was a ‘‘perversion’’. – Telegraph Group