Las Vegas Review-Journal

Obama in Japan: North Korea uses isolation as tool

- By Yuri Kageyama The Associated Press

TOKYO — Former President Barack Obama said Sunday that negotiatio­ns with North Korea on its nuclear weapons program are difficult, partly because the country’s isolation minimizes possible leverage, such as trade and travel sanctions against Pyongyang.

“North Korea is an example of a country that is so far out of the internatio­nal norms and so disconnect­ed with the rest of the world,” Obama told a packed hall in Tokyo.

He stressed that the effort to get North Korea to give up nuclear weapons remains difficult, but said countries working together, including China, South Korea and Japan, to pressure the North is better than nations working alone.

He noted that past U.S. efforts on Iran’s nuclear weapons were more successful because there was more leverage, but that there’s little commerce and travel with North Korea to being with.

“That makes them less subject to these kinds of negotiatio­ns,” he said of North Korea.

Obama was speaking at an event sponsored by a Japanese nonprofit group during an Asia-pacific trip that included earlier stops in Singapore, New Zealand and Australia.

Obama, welcomed by a standing ovation, said that the U.s.-japan alliance remains strong, and that the U.S. is committed to defending Japan.

“North Korea is a real threat,” he said.

“Our view has always been that we would prefer to resolve these issues peacefully,” he said, adding that otherwise “the cost in terms of human life would be significan­t.”

Almost all American presidents tend to be relatively popular in Japan, which views the U.S. as its most important ally. But many Japanese particular­ly appreciate Obama’s efforts on denucleari­zation and remember with fondness his trip to Hiroshima and his message of working toward a world without nuclear weapons.

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