Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

NKorea unveils new weapons at parade

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SEOUL, South Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un warned Saturday that his country would “fully mobilize” its nuclear force if threatened as he took center stage at a military parade in which the country unveiled what appeared to be a new interconti­nental ballistic missile and other additions to its growingwea­pons arsenal.

Kim, however, avoided direct criticism ofWashingt­on during the event, which celebrated the 75th anniversar­y of the country’s ruling party and took place less than four weeks before the U.S. presidenti­al election. Instead, he focused on a domestic message urging his people to remain firm in the face of “tremendous challenges” posed by the coronaviru­s pandemic and crippling U.S.-led sanctions over his nuclear program.

Kim described the North’s continuing efforts to develop its nuclear deterrent as necessary for its defense and said it wasn’t targeting any specific country with its military force.

But “if any force harms the safety of our nation, we will fully mobilize the strongest offensive might in a preemptive manner to punish them,” he said.

Kim’s speech was punctuated by thousands of goose- stepping troops, tanks, armored vehicles, rocket launchers and a broad range of ballistic missiles rolled out in Pyongyang’s Kim Il Sung Square.

The weapons included what was possibly the North’s biggest-yet ICBM, which was mounted on an 11-axle launch vehicle that was also seen for the first time. The North also displayed a variety of solid-fuel weapon systems, including what could be an advanced version of its Pukguksong family of missiles designed to be fired from submarines or land mobile launchers.

During his speech, Kim seemed to tear up at one point as he repeatedly thanked his “great people” and military for overcoming “unexpected” burdens and carrying out antivirus measures imposed by the ruling party and government to keep the country COVID-19-free, a claim that has been widely questioned by outside observers. He also extended an olive branch to rival SouthKorea, expressing hope that the countries can repair bilateral ties once the threat of the pandemic is over. The North had suspended virtually all cooperatio­n with the South amid the stalemate in larger nuclear negotiatio­ns with theUnited States.

Wisconsin arrests: Police arrested 28 people during a third straight night of protests over the lack of charges against a suburban Milwaukee police officer who fatally shot a Black teen, authoritie­s said Saturday.

About 100 people gathered outside City Hall on Friday past Wauwatosa’s 7 p.m. curfew and refused multiple orders to disperse, according to police.

Police said two of the arrests were for felonies, one was for a misdemeano­r and 25 were for municipal citations. Police said some of the people arrested were blocking traffic, others had tried to start fires, and one person had materials to start a fire, including lighter fluid. Police said one person in the group posted a picture of himself with a handgun — though it was not clear if he was among those arrested.

Two people arrested were evaluated for minor injuries, police said.

Protesters have gathered every day since prosecutor­s announcedW­ednesday that they would not charge Officer Joseph Mensah in 17year-old Alvin Cole’s death. Mensah, who is Black, shot Cole after a foot chase outside a Wauwatosa mall in February.

The protests in Wauwatosa are just the latest in a series of demonstrat­ions against police racism and brutality that have erupted across the country since George Floyd’s death. Floyd, who was Black, died in May after a white police officer in Minneapoli­s pressed his knee into his neck as Floyd gasped that he couldn’t breathe.

Chris Christie out of hospital:

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Saturday he has been discharged from a New Jersey hospital where he spent a week, following his announceme­nt that he had contracted the coronaviru­s.

“I am happy to let you know that this morning I was released from Morristown Medical Center,” Christie said in a Saturday morning post on Twitter. “I want to thank the extraordin­ary doctors & nurses who cared for me for the last week. Thanks to my family & friends for their prayers. I will have more to say about all of this nextweek.”

Christie announced Oct. 3 that he had tested positive and said hours later that he had checked himself into the hospital after deciding with his doctors that doing so would be “an important precaution­ary measure,” given his history of asthma.

Christie was part of a string of virus cases connected to President Donald Trump’s inner circle. In addition to Trump and first ladyMelani­a Trump, multiple peoplewhoh­ad traveled with the president or attended events with him recently contracted the virus.

Trump’s former 2016 rival told The Associated Press on Oct. 2 that the last time he was with the president was Sept. 29 in Cleveland during preparatio­ns for his debate with former Vice President Joe Biden. He tweeted the morning of

Oct. 2 that he had last tested negative ahead of that first presidenti­al debate andwas not having any symptoms then.

Trump election suit tossed:

A federal judge in Pennsylvan­ia on Saturday threw out a lawsuit filed by President Donald Trump’s campaign, dismissing its challenges to the battlegrou­nd state’s poll-watching law and its efforts to limit how mail-in ballots can be collected and which of them can be counted.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge J. Nicholas Ranjan— whowas appointedb­y Trump — in Pittsburgh also poured cold water on Trump’s claims that Pennsylvan­ia is fertile ground for election fraud.

Trump’s campaign said it would appeal at least one element of the decision, with barely three weeks to go until Election Day in a state hotly contested by Trump and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden.

The lawsuitwas opposed by the administra­tion of

Gov. TomWolf, a Democrat, the state Democratic Party, the League of Women Voters, the NAACP’s Pennsylvan­ia office and other allied groups.

Iowa crop losses: Crop loss estimates from a rare wind storm that slammed Iowa in August have increased by more than 50%, a new report shows.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e said Friday that the number of crop acres that Iowa farmers are unable to harvest has grown to 850,000 from estimates last month that 550,000 acres were lost, The Des Moines Register reported.

The storm, known as a derecho, generated winds of up to 140 mph that flattened crops. The damage then was compounded in late summer with a drought that, at its peak, encompasse­d much of the state.

Average corn yields in Iowa will drop to 186 bushels per acre, the USDA estimated, down from forecasts of 191 bushels in September and 202 in August.

 ?? AP ?? WIldfires in Mideast: In this frame grab from video, an army helicopter drops water on a forest fire in Ras el-Harf village, in the Baabda district of Lebanon on Friday. Wildfires around the Middle East triggered by a heatwave have killed two people, forced thousands to leave their homes and detonated landmines along the Lebanon-Israel border, officials said.
AP WIldfires in Mideast: In this frame grab from video, an army helicopter drops water on a forest fire in Ras el-Harf village, in the Baabda district of Lebanon on Friday. Wildfires around the Middle East triggered by a heatwave have killed two people, forced thousands to leave their homes and detonated landmines along the Lebanon-Israel border, officials said.

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