The Daily Telegraph

US ‘wants a dialogue with North Korea and doesn’t blame China’

- By Barney Henderson in New York and Julian Ryall in Tokyo

REX TILLERSON has said the US does not blame China for escalating tensions with North Korea and would like to seek a dialogue with Kim Jong-un’s regime.

The US secretary of state’s diplomatic tone directly contradict­ed Donald Trump, who tweeted two days ago that he was “very disappoint­ed” with China and accused Beijing of doing “nothing” over Pyongyang’s military ambitions.

Mr Tillerson said that relations between the US and China were “at a bit of a pivot point”, but that Washington had “sought to partner” with Beijing over the growing threat from North Korea.

“We do not seek a regime change, we do not seek a collapse of the regime, we do not seek an accelerate­d reunificat­ion of the peninsula, we do not seek an excuse to send our military north of the 38th Parallel,” Mr Tillerson said in the rare press address at the state department.

“We are not your enemy … but you are presenting an unacceptab­le threat to us, and we have to respond.

“We hope that at some point they will begin to understand that and we

‘We are not your enemy … but you are presenting an unacceptab­le threat to us, and we have to respond’

would like to sit and have a dialogue with them.”

China has become increasing­ly frustrated with US and Japanese criticism that it should do more to rein in Pyongyang. A US military source reportedly claimed yesterday that Pyongyang’s submarine force had been carrying out “highly unusual and unpreceden­ted levels” of activity. The defence official told CNN that three “ejection tests” were carried out on land at Sinpo Naval Shipyard in July. Another test was carried out earlier this year at the base, which is the headquarte­rs of the Maritime Research Institute of North Korea’s Academy of National Defence Science.

An ejection test is designed to assess the cold-launch system which is required to propel a missile away from its tube on the submarine before the missile engine ignites, so protecting the boat.

The ground-based tests also coincide with a North Korean Romeo-class submarine carrying out “unusual activities” off the east coast of the peninsula for at least one week in late July.

The US and South Korea monitored the activities of the 1,800-ton diesel boat. The submarine travelled more than 60 miles from the North Korean coast and into internatio­nal waters, something which no submarine has been observed doing previously.

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