Lodi News-Sentinel

U.S. warns North Korea after failed missile test

- By Ken Thomas and Darlene Superville

PANMUNJOM, South Korea — A day after a failed North Korean missile test, U.S. President Donald Trump had a message Monday for the North’s ruler: ‘Gotta behave.” At the same time, Vice President Mike Pence warned at the Korean Demilitari­zed Zone that America’s “era of strategic patience is over.”

Keeping up the verbal volleying, North Korea’s deputy U.N. ambassador accused the United States of turning the Korean peninsula into “the world’s biggest hotspot” and creating “a dangerous situation in which a thermonucl­ear war may break out at any moment.”

Pence’s visit to the tense DMZ dividing North and South Korea came at the start of a 10day trip to Asia and underscore­d U.S. commitment. It allowed the vice president to gaze at North Korean soldiers afar and stare directly across a border marked by razor wire.

As the bomber jacket-clad vice president was briefed near the military demarcatio­n line, two North Korean soldiers watched from a short distance away, one taking multiple photograph­s of the American visitor.

Pence told reporters that Trump was hopeful China would use its “extraordin­ary levers” to pressure the North to abandon its weapons program, a day after the North’s failed missile test launch. But Pence expressed impatience with the unwillingn­ess of the North to move toward ridding itself of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

Pointing to the quarter-century since the United States first confronted North Korea over its attempts to build nuclear weapons, he said a period of patience had followed.

“But the era of strategic patience is over,” he declared. “President Trump has made it clear that the patience of the United States and our allies in this region has run out and we want to see change. We want to see North Korea abandon its reckless path of the developmen­t of nuclear weapons, and also its continual use and testing of ballistic missiles is unacceptab­le.”

Trump himself appeared to reinforce the message at the White House, replying “Gotta behave” when a CNN reporter asked what message he had for North Korean leader Kin Jong Un.

In New York, the North’s deputy U.N. ambassador, Kim In Ryong, said that U.S.South Korean military exercises being staged now are the largest-ever “aggressive war drill.” He said his country “is ready to react to any mode of war desired by the U.S.”

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