Manila Bulletin

Trump declares North Korea state sponsor of terrorism

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WASHINGTON (AFP/Reuters) — President Donald Trump declared North Korea a state sponsor of terrorism on Monday even as his top diplomat said Washington has not given up hope of a negotiated end to its nuclear standoff with Kim Jong-Un's regime.

Trump promised a rapid ramp-up of US Treasury sanctions against the pariah state, after adding its name to a terror blacklist previously led by Iran and Syria.

''Should have happened a long time ago. Should have happened years ago,'' Trump declared, citing the death of a US student who had been held in a North Korean jail and the assassinat­ion by nerve agent of Kim's elder half brother on foreign soil as reasons for the move.

The Republican president, who has traded personal insults with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un but has not ruled out talks, said the Treasury

Department will announce additional sanctions against North Korea on Tuesday.

The designatio­n came a week after Trump returned from a 12-day, fivenation trip to Asia in which he made containing North Korea’s nuclear ambitions a centerpiec­e of his discussion­s.

“In addition to threatenin­g the world by nuclear devastatio­n, North Korea has repeatedly supported acts of internatio­nal terrorism, including assassinat­ions on foreign soil,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

“This designatio­n will impose further sanctions and penalties on North Korea and related persons and supports our maximum pressure campaign to isolate the murderous regime.”

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe welcomed US President Donald Trump’s move and said it would ramp up pressure on Pyongyang, Kyodo News reported. “I welcome and support (the designatio­n) as it raises the pressure on North Korea,” Abe told reporters, according to Kyodo.

North Korea is pursuing nuclear weapons and missile programs in defiance of UN Security Council sanctions and has made no secret of its plans to develop a nuclear-tipped missile capable of hitting the US mainland. It has fired two missiles over Japan and on Sept. 3 fired its sixth and largest nuclear test.

South Korea’s spy agency said the North may conduct additional missile tests this year to improve its long-range missile technology and ramp up the threat against the United States.

South Korea’s foreign ministry on Tuesday said the United States’ decision to put North Korea back on a list of state sponsors of terrorism is expected to contribute to the peaceful decentrali­zation of the North.

The announceme­nt will not change the joint stance of South Korea and the United States in trying to bring North Korea to dialogue, the ministry said in a text message to reporters.

Experts say the designatio­n will be largely symbolic as North Korea is already heavily sanctioned by the United States, a reality that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson seemed to acknowledg­e while saying it would help dissuade third parties from supporting Pyongyang.

“The practical effects may be limited but hopefully we’re closing off a few loopholes with this,” he told reporters.

The United States has designated only three other countries — Iran, Sudan and Syria — as state sponsors of terrorism.

Some experts think North Korea does not meet the criteria for the designatio­n, which requires evidence that a state has “repeatedly provided support for acts of internatio­nal terrorism.”

In his remarks, Trump remembered Otto Warmbier, the college student from Ohio who died in June shortly after his return from North Korea, where he was held for more than a year.

His death caused outrage in the United States and further inflamed tensions with Pyongyang.

Move could backfire

A US intelligen­ce official who follows developmen­ts in North Korea expressed concern that Trump’s move could backfire, especially given that the basis for the designatio­n is arguable.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the official said Kim could respond in a number of ways, including renewing missile or nuclear tests in “a very volatile environmen­t.”

The move also could undercut Trump’s efforts to solicit greater Chinese cooperatio­n in pressuring North Korea to halt its nuclear and ballistic missile tests, the official said.

In any case, it will do little to open the way for US dialogue with North Korea, which China — Pyongyang’s main ally — and others have been pushing for.

“I don’t see how this helps, and it might just be an important miscalcula­tion,” said Robert Gallucci, the chief US negotiator during the 1994 North Korean nuclear crisis.

In February, plans for talks in the United States between former US officials and North Korea were scrapped when the State Department denied a visa for a top envoy from Pyongyang after the murder of Kim’s half brother, Kim Jong Nam, in Malaysia.

North Korea was put on the US terrorism sponsor list for the 1987 bombing of a Korean Air flight that killed all 115 people aboard. But the administra­tion of former President George W. Bush, a Republican, removed Pyongyang in 2008 in exchange for progress in denucleari­zation talks.

Some members of Congress had been pushing for years for North Korea to be put back on the list, but others questioned whether the reclusive regime met the criteria of actively sponsoring internatio­nal terrorism.

 ??  ?? 'SPONSOR OF TERRORISM' — This undated photo released by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Tuesday shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un at the Sungri Motor Complex in South Pyongan Province. On Monday, United States President...
'SPONSOR OF TERRORISM' — This undated photo released by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Tuesday shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un at the Sungri Motor Complex in South Pyongan Province. On Monday, United States President...

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