The Philippine Star

NoKor begging for war, US tells UN

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NEW YORK CITY (AFP) — The United States on Monday urged the UN Security Council to impose the “strongest possible measures” against North Korea in response to its sixth and most powerful nuclear test.

The test on Sunday showed North Korean leader Kim Jongun was “begging for war,” US Ambassador Nikki Haley told an emergency council meeting, and “only the strongest sanctions will enable us to resolve this problem through diplomacy.”

Haley said North Korea “slapped everybody in the face” with its latest test and rejected as “insulting” a Chinese proposal for a freeze on Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programs in exchange for a suspension of US-South Korean annual military drills.

“When a rogue regime has a nuclear weapon and an ICBM pointed at you, you do not take steps to lower your guard. No one would do that. We certainly won’t,” she said.

But China, while condemning the nuclear test, called for talks to address the crisis.

“The situation on the peninsula is deteriorat­ing constantly as we speak, falling into a vicious circle,” said Chinese Ambassador Liu Jieyi.

“The peninsula issue must be resolved peacefully. China will never allow chaos and war on the peninsula.”

China’s proposal, that Seoul and Washington cease their war games in return for Pyongyang freezing its illicit weapon programs, was aimed at easing tension as early as possible, Liu said.

“We hope the parties concerned will seriously consider it and actively respond to it,” he added.

Pyongyang views the war games as a rehearsal for invasion. The North recently requested a Security Council meeting about the exercises.

But at the end of the meeting, Haley said the United States would instead circulate a draft resolution this week pushing further sanctions against North Korea.

On Sunday, North Korea conducted its sixth nuclear test since 2006 and its first in almost a year.

Pyongyang claimed the tested weapon was a miniaturis­ed hydrogen bomb that could be fitted to a ballistic missile.

Details could not immediatel­y be verified, but South Korean officials estimated the blast, felt in parts of South Korea and China, had a strength of up to 100 kilotons — several times more powerful than the US bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.

Haley said Pyongyang’s nuclear program is now “more advanced and more dangerous than ever.”

She declared that “enough is enough” and the “time for half measures is over,” suggesting the council must significan­tly ratchet up the pressure in any new resolution.

“The time has come to exhaust all of our diplomatic means before it’s too late. The US will be circulatin­g a resolution that we want to negotiate this week and vote on Monday,” Haley said.

She did not spell out what measures Washington would support, but diplomats have indicated that an oil embargo would have a crippling effect on the North Korean economy.

 ?? AFP ?? Photo taken on Monday shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un attending a meeting with a committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea about the test of a hydrogen bomb, at an unknown location.
AFP Photo taken on Monday shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un attending a meeting with a committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea about the test of a hydrogen bomb, at an unknown location.

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