Imperial Valley Press

Japanese defense minister sounds alarm on NKorea

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CLARK, Philippine­s (AP) — Japan’s defense minister asserted Monday that North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile capabiliti­es have grown to an “unpreceden­ted, critical and imminent” level, requiring “different responses” to the threat.

The minister, Itsunori Odonera, said that this rising threat compels his country to endorse the U.S. view that “all options” must be considered, which President Donald Trump says includes possible military action.

Japan was alarmed by North Korea twice launching missiles over Japanese territory, in August and in September.

Odonera’s comments, made through an interprete­r, came at the outset of a so-called trilateral meeting in the Philippine­s with U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and South Korea’s defense minister, Song Young-moo. Each made statements about North Korea before a group of reporters and news cameras, but none took questions.

Mattis was in the Philippine­s to attend portions of a two-day meeting of defense ministers from the 10 Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations. He used the occasion to hold a three-way meeting with his counterpar­ts from Japan and South Korea. He is scheduled later in the week to travel to Seoul to attend annual consultati­ve talks with the South Korean government, which is expected to focus mostly on North Korea.

In remarks that were notably explicit about the North Korean threat, Odonera said North Korea’s most recent undergroun­d nuclear test could have been a hydrogen bomb, which is vastly more powerful than an atomic bomb.

“The country has steadfastl­y improved it nuclear and missiles capability,” said Onodera. He added: “The threat posed by North Korea has grown to the unpreceden­ted, critical and imminent level.”

“Therefore, we have to take calibrated and different responses to meet that level of threat,” he said, without elaboratin­g on what “different” responses Japan favors.

Trump has said he will resolve the North Korea problem alone if necessary, to prevent the North from gaining the capability to attack the United States with a nuclear-armed missile.

Mattis was somewhat more reserved in his remarks than Onodera, although he did slam Pyongyang for defying U.N. Security Council resolution­s against its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. But the U.S. defense secretary did not mention any potential military action. Mattis instead emphasized a unified U.S.-Japan-South Korea position in pressuring the North to give up its nuclear program.

“North Korea’s provocatio­ns threaten regional and global security,” he said.

Earlier in the day, Mattis used the opportunit­y to personally apologize to his Indonesia counterpar­t for an unexplaine­d move by the U.S. government to prevent the top Indonesian general traveling to Washington over the weekend.

Erin McKee, the deputy U.S. ambassador to Indonesia, did not explain why Gen. Gatot Nurmantyo was prevented from boarding a flight to the U.S. to attend a conference of military chiefs but said the matter had been resolved.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI ?? In this Aug. 3 photo, Japan’s Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera speaks during a press conference at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo. Onodera is sounding an alarm on North Korea, saying its nuclear and ballistic missile capabiliti­es...
AP PHOTO/SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI In this Aug. 3 photo, Japan’s Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera speaks during a press conference at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo. Onodera is sounding an alarm on North Korea, saying its nuclear and ballistic missile capabiliti­es...

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