Daily Dispatch

Trump in China’s cross-hairs

US president’s claim that ties with N Korea ‘made difficult’ angers mainland

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China on Thursday derided the “irresponsi­ble and absurd logic” of the US after President Donald Trump accused Beijing of making Washington’s relationsh­ip with North Korea more difficult.

Trump doubled down on his suggestion that China was not helping to rein in its Cold Warera ally – a charge he first levelled when he cancelled a trip to North Korea by secretary of state Mike Pompeo that was schedule to take place this week.

“A lot of people, like me, feel that the US is first in the world when it comes to twisting the truth, and irresponsi­ble and absurd logic,” Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying said.

Trump’s refusal to direct criticism at North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and instead blame other parties for a lack of progress, comes despite reports the US received a belligeren­t letter from Pyongyang, which prompted Pompeo to cancel a planned trip to North Korea last weekend.

“We hope the US can play a positive and constructi­ve role in settling the issue just like the Chinese.

“To solve the problem, it should look at itself instead of shifting blame,” Hua added.

“Part of the North Korea problem is caused by the trade disputes with China,” Trump said at the White House.

But he insisted his ties with Chinese President Xi Jinping were “great” and that he had a “fantastic relationsh­ip” with North Korean leader Kim, whom he met in Singapore in June.

The US president said he was not considerin­g resuming joint military exercises on the Korean Peninsula that Pyongyang considers “provocativ­e”.

Beijing is Pyongyang’s sole major ally, and the main transit country for any goods entering the North.

Trump said that China – angered by US moves on trade – is no longer being as tough as it could be on North Korea.

“We know that China is providing North Korea with considerab­le aid, including money, fuel, fertiliser and various other commoditie­s. This is not helpful!” he tweeted.

On the subject of military exercises, which the US suspended as a “good faith” measure following Trump’s summit with Kim, the president said “there is no reason at this time to be spending large amounts of money on joint US-South Korea war games” though added these could resume if the need arose.

It came a day after defence secretary Jim Mattis said the Pentagon was not planning to suspend any more military drills, before appearing to backtrack on Wednesday by insisting “no decisions” had been made on the matter.

Trump also reiterated his wish to fundamenta­lly alter the trade status quo between the US and China, the world’s top two economies.

He said he needed to take a tough stance with Beijing on trade “because it was really not fair to our country”, criticisin­g his predecesso­rs who “closed their eyes” to the issue.

Pompeo said on Tuesday that Washington remained ready to engage “when it is clear that Chairman Kim stands ready to deliver on the commitment­s that he made at the Singapore summit to President Trump to completely denucleari­se North Korea”. –

 ??  ?? JIM MATTIS
JIM MATTIS

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