The Philippine Star

Trump declares NoKor state sponsor of terror

-

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

Trump promised a rapid escalation of US Treasury sanctions against the North 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 said.

He cited 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.

However, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said sanctions and diplomacy could still pressure Kim into talks on nuclear disarmamen­t.

“We still hope for diplomacy,” he said, adding that punitive measures were already having a significan­t impact on Pyongyang’s economy.

There was no immediate reaction from North Korea, but an editorial in the ruling party newspaper Rodong Sin-

mun ahead of the announceme­nt described Trump as a “mentally deranged moneygrabb­er” who was leading the US down an “irretrieva­ble road to hell.”

The White House has said it will not tolerate the North’s testing or deployment of an interconti­nental ballistic missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead to US cities.

Experts believe Pyongyang is within months of such a threshold, having carried out six nuclear tests since 2006 and test-fired several types of missiles, including multi-stage rockets.

Japan said it “welcomes and supports” Trump’s announceme­nt. But there was a more restrained response from South Korea.

Seoul’s foreign ministry said the US measure was “part of the internatio­nal community’s common efforts to bring North Korea to the path of denucleari­zation through strong sanctions and pressure.”

Some analysts warned of a possible backlash.

“North Korea will consider it as a thing next to a declaratio­n of war,” Professor Yang Moo-jin of the University for North Korean Studies in Seoul told AFP.

“There is a possibilit­y that it may retaliate by test-launching an ICBM in the near future.”

 ?? AFP ?? This undated photo shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visiting the Sungri motor complex in Pyongyang.
AFP This undated photo shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visiting the Sungri motor complex in Pyongyang.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines