Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

China warns U.S., N. Korea

Don’t go past point of no return, official says

- By Anna Fifield

TOKYO — China issued a stern warning Friday to both the United States and North Korea, urging them not to push their recriminat­ions to a point of no return and allow war to break out on the Korean Peninsula.

In comments carried by China’s official Xinhua news agency, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said “storm clouds” were gathering, an apparent reference to North Korean preparatio­ns to conduct a new nuclear test and the U.S. deployment of a naval strike force to the waters off the peninsula. In addition, the U.S. military has been conducting large-scale military exercises with South Korean forces, drills that the North considers provocativ­e.

“The United States and South Korea and North Korea are engaging in tit for tat, with swords drawn and bows bent,” Mr. Wang said after a meeting with visiting French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault, Xinhua reported. “We urge all sides to no longer engage in mutual provocatio­n and threats, whether through words or deeds.”

He also called on them not to push matters to a point from which they “cannot be turned around.” If they allow war to break out on the peninsula, they must bear the historical responsibi­lity and “pay the correspond­ing price,” Mr. Wang warned.

Earlier Friday, North Korea accused President Donald Trump of “making trouble” with his “aggressive” tweets, amid concerns that tensions between the two countries could escalate into military action.

And the North Korean army

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion has settled on its North Korea strategy after a two-month review: “Maximum pressure and engagement.”

U.S. officials said Friday the president’s advisers weighed a range of ideas for how to get North Korea to abandon its nuclear program, including military options and trying to overthrow the communist dictatorsh­ip’s leadership. At the other end of the spectrum, they looked at the notion of accepting North Korea as a nuclear state. In the end, they settled on a policy that appears to represent continuity.

The administra­tion’s emphasis, the officials said, will be on increasing pressure on Pyongyang with the help of China, North Korea’s dominant trade partner. The officials weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the results of the policy review and requested anonymity.

The new strategy will be deployed at a time of escalating tensions on the Korean Peninsula. U.S., South Korean and other officials are monitoring the North amid indication­s it could conduct another missile test or nuclear explosion to coincide with an important national anniversar­y this weekend. Pyongyang has undertaken five nuclear tests since 2006.

An influentia­l Washington think tank estimated Friday that North Korea could already have up to 30 bombs. The Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security cited a worrying increase in North Korea’s nuclear program, but said the arsenal may only have been as large as 13 atomic weapons at the end of 2016. Its research suggested a range between 10 and 16 such weapons two years earlier. The institute’s estimates are based on what it believes the North has produced in plutonium and weapons-grade uranium. The margins represent uncertaint­y as to whether North Korea has one or two uranium enrichment facilities.

The North has owned up to one such facility, at its Nyongbyon nuclear complex, but the U.S. government assumes it has more.

David Albright, the institute’s president, said the North may have a handful of plutonium-based warheads it can mount on medium-range ballistic missiles capable of reaching South Korea and Japan. But it’s doubtful the North is currently able to build reliable, survivable warheads for an interconti­nental ballistic missile that can strike the U.S. mainland, he said.

As for the Trump administra­tion’s policy, the U.S. officials emphasized that no engagement of North Korea is currently taking place. Although China advocates for diplomatic outreach, the focus for now is on pressure.

The officials said the goal of engagement would have to be North Korea’s denucleari­zation. It cannot lead to an arms control agreement or reduction of the North’s atomic arsenal that would imply American acceptance of North Korea as a nuclear power.

The officials are hopeful China and Russia would agree to tighter U.N. sanctions on North Korea if it conducts another nuclear test. They pointed to a recent editorial in a state-run Chinese newspaper advocating tighter restrictio­ns on selling oil to North Korea.

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