Dayton Daily News

N. Korea nuclear test raises stakes

After huge blast, Mattis says U.S. will answer any threat with ‘massive military response.’

- By Robert Burns and Catherine Lucey

Defense SecreWASHI­NGTON — tary Jim Mattis on Sunday shot back at North Korea’s claimed test of a hydrogen bomb with a blunt threat, saying the U.S. will answer any threat from the North with a “massive military response a response both effective and — overwhelmi­ng.” Earlier, President Donald Trump threatened to halt all trade with countries doing business with the North, a veiled warning to China, and faulted South Korea for its “talk of appeasemen­t.”

The tough talk from America’s commander in chief and the retired Marine general he picked to oversee the Pentagon came as

the Trump administra­tion searched for a response to the escalating crisis. Kim Jong Un’s regime on Sunday claimed “perfect success” in an undergroun­d test of what it called a hydrogen bomb. It was the North’s sixth nuclear test since 2006 — the first since Trump took office in January — and involved a device potentiall­y vastly more powerful than a nuclear bomb.

Trump, asked by a reporter during a trip to church services if he would attack the North, said: “We’ll see.” No U.S. military action

appeared imminent, and the immediate focus appeared to be on ratcheting up economic penalties, which have had little effect thus far.

The U.N. Security Coun- cil scheduled an emergency meeting at the request of the U.S., Japan, France, Britain and South Korea. It would be the Security Council’s second urgent session in under a week on the North’s weap- ons tests, which have continued in the face of a series of sanctions.

Members of Congress expressed alarm at the North’s test and emphasized strength- ening U.S. missile defenses. Leaders in Russia, China and

Europe issued condemna- tions.

In brief remarks after a White House meeting with Trump and other national security officials, Mattis told reporters that America does not seek the “total annihilati­on” of the North, but then added somberly, “We have many options to do so.” The administra­tion has emphasized its pursuit of diplomatic

solutions, knowing the potentiall­y horrific costs of war with the North. But the decision to have Mattis deliver a public statement seemed to suggest an escalating crisis.

Mattis also said the internatio­nal community is unified in demanding the denucle- arization of the Korean pen- insula and that Kim should know that Washington’s commitment to Japan and South Korea is unshakeabl­e.

The precise strength of the undergroun­d nuclear explosion had yet to be determined. South Korea’s weather agency said the artificial earthquake caused by the explosion was five to six times stronger than tremors generated by the North’s previous five tests.

North Korea’s state-run television broadcast a special bulletin to announce the test, and said Kim attended a meeting of the ruling party’s presidium and signed

the go-ahead order. Earlier, the party’s newspaper published photos of Kim examining what it said was a nuclear warhead being fitted onto an interconti­nental ballistic missile.

Sunday’s detonation builds on recent North Korean advances that include test launches in July of two ICBMs that are believed to be capable of reaching the mainland U.S. The North says its missile developmen­t is part of a defensive effort to build a

viable nuclear deterrent that can target U.S. cities.

The Arms Control Associatio­n said the explosion appeared to produce a yield in excess of 100 kilotons of TNT equivalent, which it said strongly suggests the North tested a high-yield but compact nuclear weapon that could be launched on a missile of intermedia­te or interconti­nental range.

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