Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

China’s Xi calls for the U.S. and North Korea to tone down nuclear rhetoric.

Chinese president urges Trump, Kim to tone down rhetoric

- By Eric Talmadge and Jonathan Lemire

Chinese President Xi Jinping made a plea for cool-headedness over escalating tensions between the U.S. and North Korea in a phone conversati­on with U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday, urging both sides to avoid words or actions that could worsen the situation.

The call came after Trump unleashed a slew of fresh threats against North Korea on Friday, declaring the U.S. military “locked and loaded” and warning North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that he “will regret it fast” if he takes any action against U.S. territorie­s or allies.

Trump has pushed China to pressure North Korea to halt a nuclear weapons program that is nearing the capability of targeting the United States. China is the North’s biggest economic partner and source of aid, but says it alone can’t compel Pyongyang to end its nuclear and missile programs.

The White House said in a statement that Trump and Xi “agreed North Korea must stop its provocativ­e and escalatory behavior.” It also said that the two “reiterated their mutual commitment to denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.”

State-run China Central Television quoted Xi as telling Trump the “relevant parties must maintain restraint and avoid words and deeds that would exacerbate the tension on the Korean Peninsula.”

But restraint was not the word of the day on Friday as Trump sent out a cascade of unscripted statements, including what appeared to be another red line — the mere utterance of threats — that would trigger a U.S. attack against North Korea and “big, big trouble” for Kim.

North Korea’s Minju Joson newspaper, meanwhile, lashed back at the U.S. in an editorial Saturday.

“The powerful revolution­ary Paektusan army of the DPRK, capable of fighting any war the U.S. wants, is now on the standby to launch fire into its mainland, waiting for an order of final attack,” it said. DPRK stands for North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The tough talk capped a week in which long-standing tensions between the countries risked abruptly boiling over.

New United Nations sanctions condemning the North’s rapidly developing nuclear program drew fresh ire and threats from Pyongyang. Trump, responding to a report that U.S. intelligen­ce indicates Pyongyang can now put a nuclear warhead on its long-range missiles, vowed to rain down “fire and fury” if challenged.

The North then came out with a threat to lob four intermedia­te-range Hwasong-12 missiles near Guam, a tiny U.S. territory some 2,000 miles from Pyongyang.

Trump’s comments did not appear to be backed by significan­t military mobilizati­on on either side of the Pacific, and an important, quiet diplomatic channel remained open. As a precaution, Japan deployed missile defense batteries under the path a North Korean missile might take.

 ?? Ryosuke Ozawa The Associated Press ?? A PAC-3 intercepto­r is deployed in the compound of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force on Saturday in Konan, Kochi prefecture, Japan. Japan started deploying intercepto­rs after North Korea threatened to send ballistic missiles toward Guam.
Ryosuke Ozawa The Associated Press A PAC-3 intercepto­r is deployed in the compound of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force on Saturday in Konan, Kochi prefecture, Japan. Japan started deploying intercepto­rs after North Korea threatened to send ballistic missiles toward Guam.

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