Los Angeles Times

TRUMP TARGETS NORTH KOREA AGAIN

President announces new sanctions and claims China will restrict Pyongyang’s access to its banks.

- By Brian Bennett and Tracy Wilkinson

UNITED NATIONS — President Trump announced Thursday a new round of sanctions against North Korea as he struggles to confront that country’s determinat­ion to build a nuclear arsenal.

After threatenin­g earlier this week to “totally destroy” North Korea if it uses its nuclear weaponry against U.S. territory or allies, Trump told reporters he was issuing a new executive order, adding more sanctions to those that the United States and allies already have imposed.

He said the measures would target North Korea’s textiles, fishing industry and shipping. Sanctions against those industries are already in place, so it was unclear what was different about the additional ones.

“The brutal North Korean regime does not respect its own citizens or the sovereignt­y of other nations,” Trump said. “Our new executive order will cut off sources of revenue that fund North Korea’s efforts to develop the deadliest weapons known to humankind.”

Under the executive order, the U.S. Treasury Department will be able to blacklist any businesses and individual­s trading or doing financial work with North Korea.

That could force other nations and foreign businesses to make a choice: “Do business with the United States ... or the lawless regime” of North Korea, Trump said.

He repeated that he wants nothing less than “a complete denucleari­zation of North Korea.” Many observers call that standard all but impossible, given Pyongyang’s progress to date.

Potentiall­y significan­t

was Trump’s claim that China had agreed to restrict North Korea’s access to its banking system. China is North Korea’s chief ally and responsibl­e for 90% of its trade. The Trump administra­tion has repeatedly sought Beijing’s cooperatio­n in enforcing sanctions, but China is nervous about causing the government in North Korea to collapse because it might trigger a refugee crisis or broader instabilit­y.

However, there were questions about whether China had actually agreed to what Trump suggested, and the White House would not go into detail.

“Secretary [Steven] Mnuchin [of Treasury] and People’s Bank of China [Gov. Zhou Xiaochuan] had a productive meeting this morning,” said White House Principal Deputy Press Secretary Raj Shah.

China has previously agreed to enforce sanctions against North Korea, only to later pull back.

Richard Nephew, a sanctions expert in the Obama administra­tion, said the new measures represente­d a “fairly sizable escalation” in pressure against North Korea. But he said the key will be whether the U.S. begins using the new powers to sanction Chinese banks that deal with North Korea.

“This is, in my view, the potential start of a process that could go slowly or swiftly, but it is certain that no decision has been made yet whether to actually hit [the] Chinese bank,” Nephew said. “There is a general authority here to sanction exporters and importers, which is probably more likely to be used first than the finance thing” against banks.

Already, the U.S. and the U.N. have imposed tough economic sanctions against North Korea that eat away at its export income, imports and revenue from workers it sends overseas. But none of those measures has curbed efforts by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to develop interconti­nental missiles capable of delivering a nuclear weapon to the United States.

Trump, on the margins of the annual United Nations General Assembly, also met Thursday with the presiJapan’s dents of Japan and South Korea, the two neighbors of North Korea with the most at stake in the showdown.

Japanese President Shinzo Abe praised Trump’s willingnes­s to push North Korea to the negotiatin­g table, adding that “dialogue for the sake of dialogue would not produce anything.” Abe, who spent a weekend at Trump’s Mar-aLago club in February, referred to Trump as “Donald.”

“The key at this moment is to exercise and apply pressure against North Korea in a robust manner,” Abe said. “And together with Donald we have been successful­ly demonstrat­ing our strong will to exercise pressure against North Korea.”

Trump, asked by a reporter whether diplomatic talks were still possible, said, “Why not?”

South Korean President Moon Jae-in also voiced concerns about North Korea’s behavior, but he too has advocated diplomacy and dialogue, not the military option that Trump suggests he is considerin­g. Most experts think a military response to North Korea could lead to catastroph­ic violence against the southern half of the peninsula, where thousands of American troops are stationed.

“North Korea has continued to make provocatio­ns, and this is extremely deplorable and this has angered both me and our people,” Moon said, adding he was grateful for the United States’ firm response.

Trump took the opportunit­y to reiterate his opposition to the U.S. trade deal with South Korea, which he said favored Seoul. Experts have said it is the wrong time to call the deal into question given tension with North Korea.

Thus far, sanctions have failed to deter North Korea. The government launched two missiles within two months and completed an undergroun­d test of what was thought to be a hydrogen bomb, its most powerful yet. In all, the country has conducted six nuclear tests.

It has threatened Japan, South Korea and the U.S. territory of Guam, as well as the continenta­l U.S. Trump has responded with equally bellicose language, threatenin­g to unleash “fire and fury” on North Korea.

Kim also fired two midrange missiles over one of northern islands, both landing in the ocean.

Few diplomats or arms control experts foresee Kim abandoning his nuclear arsenal — now estimated to include 20 to 60 bombs. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has called on the country to stop testing ballistic missiles as a confidence-building measure to allow diplomacy to proceed.

But Kim has shown no interest in such talks. Responding late Thursday to Trump, Kim said the American president was “deranged,” a “rogue” and a “gangster” who would “pay dearly” for his insults to North Korea, according to the North Korean state news agency.

This week, Trump called Kim a “rocket man” on a “suicide mission.”

The Trump administra­tion succeeded in securing unanimous approval at the U.N. Security Council for sanctions against North Korea in August and again in September that target more than a third of the country’s income.

Mnuchin said the sanctions that Trump authorized Thursday were stronger because they would target any transactio­n with North Korea and anyone who facilitate­d such transactio­n.

“The objective is for them to give up their ballistic weapons,” he said, adding he had no timeline for when China’s banking measures might have an impact.

And he defended sanctions against criticism that they have been ineffectiv­e. Many countries, especially Russia and China and some African nations, have found ways around them.

Many experts agree that sanctions are a better path than military action.

“New Trump administra­tion sanctions against North Korea a smart move, raising cost to Pyongyang for its nuke programs,” tweeted Nicholas Burns, a former State Department official in Democratic and Republic administra­tions and frequent critic of Trump.

Sen. Ben Sasse, a Republican from Nebraska who is also often critical of the administra­tion, said: “The United States is an economic and military superpower, and trade is an effective weapon.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States