Chattanooga Times Free Press

U.S. beefs up N. Korea sanctions; Kim insults Trump

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NEW YORK — President Donald Trump added economic action to his fiery military threats against North Korea on Thursday, authorizin­g stiffer new sanctions in response to the Koreans’ nuclear weapons advances. Its leader, Kim Jong Un, issued a rare statement, branding Trump as “deranged” and warning he will “pay dearly” for his threat to “totally destroy” the North if it attacks.

The exchange of super-heated rhetoric and unusually personal abuse between the adversarie­s will escalate tensions that have been mounting as North Korea has marched closer to achieving a nuclear-tipped missile that could strike America. The crisis has dominated the Trump’s debut at this week’s annual U.N. General Assembly meeting.

Kim’s statement, carried by North Korea’s official news agency in a dispatch from Pyongyang early Friday, responded to Trump’s combative speech days earlier where he not only issued the warning of potential obliterati­on for the isolated nation, but also mocked the North’s young autocrat as a “Rocket Man” on a “suicide mission.”

Kim offered choice insults of his own.

He said Trump was “unfit to hold the prerogativ­e of supreme command of a country.” He described the president as “a rogue and a gangster fond of playing with fire.” He characteri­zed Trump’s speech to the world body on Tuesday as “mentally deranged behavior.”

“I will make the man holding the prerogativ­e of the supreme command in the U.S. pay dearly for his speech calling for totally destroying the DPRK,” said the statement carried by Korean Central News Agency.

DPRK is the abbreviati­on of the communist country’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

There was no immediate response from the White House.

On Thursday in New York, Trump announced the latest steps to punish foreign companies that deal with the North.

His executive order expanded the Treasury Department’s ability to target anyone conducting significan­t trade in goods, services or technology with North Korea, and to ban them from interactin­g with the U.S. financial system.

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