Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Tillerson warns of possible strike on North Korea

‘All options’ on the table against nuclear threat

- MATT STILES TRACY WILKINSON

WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Rex Tillerson warned Friday that “all options” are being considered to counter North Korea’s emerging nuclear threat, including a military strike if necessary to safeguard allies and tens of thousands of U.S. troops stationed in the region.

The threat of a full-scale U.S. military attack comes after a series of North Korean ballistic missile tests in recent weeks have heightened tensions across northeast Asia and raised the possibilit­y of a conflict with an adversary that now possesses nuclear arms and appears close to being able to strike U.S. territory.

The tough talk appears to be a break from previous U.S. administra­tions, which emphasized diplomacy, economic sanctions and covert operations, including cyberattac­ks, to try to reduce the danger from one of the world’s most isolated, and unpredicta­ble, dictatorsh­ips.

“Certainly we do not want for things to get to a military conflict,” Tillerson told reporters in Seoul on the second leg of his three-nation visit to Asia, his first to the region since taking office.

“We’ve been quite clear on that in our communicat­ions. But obviously if North Korea takes actions that threaten the South Korean forces or our own forces, then that will be met with an appropriat­e response,” he added.

“Let me very clear: The policy of strategic patience

has ended,” he said, referring to the Obama administra­tion’s policy of trying to wait out the North Korean regime while pressing it with economic sanctions and covert actions.

He emphasized the need for maintainin­g economic sanctions on Pyongyang but also made clear that the Trump administra­tion would not be limited to that approach.

“We’re exploring a new range of diplomatic, security and economic measures. All options are on the table,” he said.

He also appeared to reject the idea of trying to negotiate a freeze in North Korea’s weapons program, a policy that the Clinton administra­tion tried in the mid-1990s by supplying oil and other aid to Pyongyang in an effort to block its nuclear developmen­t.

The deal eventually broke down, and North Korea has built a sizable nuclear stockpile. Its most recent nuclear test, last September, was said to produce a yield larger than the nuclear bomb that the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima in 1945.

“At this stage, I’m not sure we would be willing to freeze with the circumstan­ces where they exist today, given that would leave North Korea with significan­t capabiliti­es that would represent a true threat not just to the region but to American forces as well,” Tillerson said.

In a sign of the growing friction, the North Korean Embassy in Beijing invited reporters in for a rare news conference to blame the United States for risking a nuclear war. The officials also vowed to continue Pyongyang’s fast-developing nuclear testing program.

For his part, President Donald Trump declared on Twitter that North Korea was “behaving very badly” and dismissed Chinese efforts to engage Washington and Pyongyang in talks aimed at easing tensions.

Tillerson’s remarks, standing beside his South Korean counterpar­t, Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se, came a day after he declared in Tokyo that two decades of U.S. attempts to block North Korea from developing nuclear weapons had failed and that a “different approach” was required.

Earlier in the day, Tillerson toured the Demilitari­zed Zone, a heavily guarded buffer of border land between North and South Korea intended to diffuse tensions after the 1953 armistice that halted fighting during the Korean War. The two nations have never signed a formal peace accord.

A group of North Koreans, apparently tourists, waved at reporters from across the border during Tillerson’s visit. A helmeted North Korean soldier, just yards away across the border, took pictures of Tillerson’s back as he posed with U.S. commanders.

Tillerson’s tour of the region comes as the U.S. military is participat­ing in a two-month exercise with South Korean and Japanese forces, an annual exercise that North Korea routinely denounces as a prelude to war.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is briefed by U.S. Gen. Vincent K. Brooks as a North Korean soldier takes a photograph through a window Friday at the U.N. Command Military Armistice Commission in the border village of Panmunjom.
ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is briefed by U.S. Gen. Vincent K. Brooks as a North Korean soldier takes a photograph through a window Friday at the U.N. Command Military Armistice Commission in the border village of Panmunjom.

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