Dayton Daily News

Trump mocks N. Korean leader

President will speak to U.N. with rogue nation high on the agenda.

- By Darlene Superville

President DonSOMERSE­T, N.J. — ald Trump on Sunday mocked the leader of nuclear-armed North Korea as “Rocket Man” while White House advisers said the isolated nation would face destruc

tion unless it shelves its weapons programs and bellicose threats.

Trump’s chief diplomat held out hope the North would return to the bargaining table, though the president’s envoy to the United Nations said the Security Council had “pretty much exhausted” all its options. Kim Jong Un has pledged to continue the North’s programs, saying his country is nearing its goal of “equilibriu­m” in military force with the United States.

North Korea will be high on the agenda for world leaders this coming week at the annual meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, Trump’s biggest moment on the world stage since his inaugurati­on in January.

Trump is scheduled to address the world body, which he has criticized as weak and incompeten­t, on Tuesday. Trump, who spent the week

end at his New Jersey golf club, tweeted that he and South Korean President Moon Jae-in discussed North Korea during their latest telephone conversati­on Saturday. Asked about Trump’s descrip

tion of Kim, national security

adviser H.R. McMaster said “Rocket Man” was “a new one and I think maybe for the president.” But, he said, “that’s where the rockets are coming from. Rockets,

though, we ought to probably not laugh too much about because they do represent a great threat to all.”

McMaster said Kim is “going to have to give up his nuclear weapons because the president has said he’s not going to tolerate this regime threatenin­g the United States and our citizens with a nuclear weapon.”

Asked if that meant Trump would launch a military strike, McMaster said “he’s been very clear about that, that all options are on the table.”

Some doubt Kim would ever agree to surrender his arsenal.

“I think that North Korea is not going to give up its program with nothing on the table,” said Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of Califor- nia, a member of the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee.

Kim has threatened Guam, a U.S. territory in the Pacific, and has fired missiles over Japan, a U.S. ally. North Korea also recently tested its most powerful bomb.

The U.N. Security Coun- cil has voted unanimousl­y twice in recent weeks to tighten economic sanctions on North Korea, including targeting shipments of oil and other fuel used in missile testing.

Trump’s U.N. ambassa- dor, Nikki Haley, said North Korea was starting to “feel

the pinch.” Trump, in a tweet, asserted that long lines for gas were forming in North Korea, and he said that was “too bad.”

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said he was waiting for the North to express

interest in “constructi­ve, productive talks.”

“All they need to do to let us know they’re ready to talk is to just stop these tests, stop these provocativ­e actions, and let’s lower the threat level and the rhetoric,” he said.

But Haley warned of a tougher U.S. response to future North Korean provocatio­ns.

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