Orlando Sentinel

A global pressure

- By Josh Lederman Associated Press

campaign on North Korea propelled by new U.N. sanctions gets a boost as China calls on its neighbor to halt its missile and nuclear tests.

MANILA, Philippine­s — A global pressure campaign on North Korea propelled by sharp new U.N. sanctions received a boost Sunday from China, the North’s economic lifeline, as Beijing called on its neighbor to halt its missile and nuclear tests.

The Trump administra­tion cautiously embraced China’s apparent newfound cooperatio­n, while putting it on notice that the U.S. would be watching closely to ensure it didn’t ease up on North Korea if and when the world’s attention is diverted elsewhere. But there were no signs the U.S. would acquiesce to China’s call for a quick return to negotiatio­ns.

The diplomatic wrangling sought to build on the sweeping new North Korea sanctions passed by the U.N. Security Council a day earlier — the strongest in a generation, the U.S. said.

As diplomats gathered in the Philippine­s for an annual regional meeting, President Donald Trump was cheering the move. He cited the “very big financial impact” of the sanctions and noted optimistic­ally that both China and Russia had joined in the unanimous vote.

“It was a good outcome,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said in characteri­stically understate­d fashion.

For the U.S., it was a long-awaited sign of progress for Trump’s strategy of trying to enlist Beijing’s help to squeeze North Korea diplomatic­ally and economical­ly. Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, meeting with North Korea’s top diplomat during the gathering in Manila, urged the North to “maintain calm” despite the U.N. vote.

“Do not violate the U.N.’s decision or provoke internatio­nal society’s goodwill by conducting missile launching or nuclear tests,” Wang said, in an unusually direct admonition.

Tillerson did not meet with North Korea’s envoy, Ri Yong Ho. In fact, on his first day in Manila, Tillerson appeared to go out of his way to avoid crossing paths with Ri.

Though Beijing repeated its call for the United States and North Korea to resume talks, the U.S. said that was still premature, and rejected yet again a Chinese call for the U.S. to freeze joint military exercises with South Korea in exchange for the North halting nuclear developmen­t. Pyongyang views the military exercises as rehearsals for an invasion.

The U.S. also warned it planned to rigorously monitor China’s compliance with the new penalties. Susan Thornton, the top U.S. diplomat for Asia, said Beijing had historical­ly cooperated with sanctions after flagrant North Korean violations but then slipped back over time.

“We want to make sure China is continuing to implement fully the sanctions regime,” Thornton told reporters in Manila. “Not this kind of episodic back and forth that we’ve seen.”

Infusing the diplomatic gathering with dramatic intrigue was the presence of Ri, the odd man out at a meeting dominated by concerns about his nation’s nuclear proliferat­ion.

Indeed, the U.S. was floating a proposal to temporaril­y kick North Korea out of the 27-member Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum, although other member nations are divided about that idea.

Though Tillerson has emphasized the Trump administra­tion’s willingnes­s to sit down with North Korea for negotiatio­ns, he has said that won’t happen until the North agrees to abandon its nuclear aspiration­s. Even with new U.N. sanctions in place intended to drive Pyongyang back to the table, conditions still aren’t ripe for talks, U.S. diplomats said.

But Wang, the Chinese envoy, cast Ri’s presence in Manila as a positive, enabling him to “hear the voices from other sides.” Speaking in Chinese, Wang said that Ri “also has the right to share his opinions.”

By late Sunday, Ri hadn’t spoken publicly since arriving in the Philippine­s. But a commentary in the ruling party’s Rodong Sinmun newspaper said Washington had disregarde­d the warning the North sent with its interconti­nental ballistic missile tests and was pursuing “desperate efforts” in the form of stepped-up sanctions.

“Now the U.S. mainland is on the crossroads of life and death,” the commentary warned.

The new sanctions could cut off roughly one-third of North Korea’s estimated $3 billion in annual exports, ostensibly denying the nation funds for its weapons programs. All countries are now banned from importing North Korean coal, iron, lead and seafood products, and from letting in more North Korean laborers whose remittance­s help fund Kim Jong Un’s regime.

The U.S. drafted the sanctions resolution and negotiated it with China following North Korea’s unpreceden­ted test of an ICBM in July and a follow-up test weeks later. Those tests sharply escalated U.S. fears that Pyongyang is a key step closer to mastering the technology needed to strike American soil with a nuclear-tipped missile.

Yet despite deeming North Korea a top security threat, the young Trump administra­tion has struggled to find a strategy that differs significan­tly from what the U.S. has tried in the past.

Trump’s initial optimism about China’s willingnes­s to help gave way to public exasperati­on, with Trump saying Chinese President Xi Jinping had “tried” but that it “has not worked out.”

Trump’s administra­tion began floating potential plans to punish China for its trade practices in what was widely perceived as a reaction to China’s inaction on North Korea.

 ?? ROUELLE UMALI/XINHUA ?? Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, left, and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi pose before a bilateral meeting Sunday.
ROUELLE UMALI/XINHUA Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, left, and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi pose before a bilateral meeting Sunday.
 ?? BULLIT MARQUEZ/AP ?? Wang Yi, right, urged North Korean counterpar­t Ri Yong Ho to follow U.N. sanctions.
BULLIT MARQUEZ/AP Wang Yi, right, urged North Korean counterpar­t Ri Yong Ho to follow U.N. sanctions.

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