Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Haley: N. Korea ‘begging for war’

UN told to push for more sanctions

- By Maria Sanminiate­lli and Jennifer Peltz

NEWYORK — North Korea’s leader is “begging for war,” the U.S. ambassador said Monday at an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council, as members called for punishing the country with even stronger sanctions for its powerful nuclear test.

Ambassador Nikki Haley said the U.S. would look at countries doing business with the North — which include China — and planned to circulate a resolution this week with the goal of getting itapproved Sept. 11.

“Enough is enough. War is never something the United States wants. We don’t want it now. But our country’s patience isnot unlimited,” Ms. Haley said.

“The United States will look at every country that does business with North Korea as a country, that is giving aid to their reckless and dangerous nuclear intentions,” she said.

The move came as South Korea said it was seeing preparatio­ns in the North for an ICBM test and fired missiles into the sea to simulate an attack on the North’s main nuclear test site.

Also on Monday, President Donald Trump spoke by phone with South Korean President Moon Jae-in and agreed that Sunday’s undergroun­d nuclear test by North Korea was an unpreceden­ted provocatio­n. The two leaders also agreed to

remove the limit on the payload of South Korean missiles.

The emergency U.N. session was scheduled after North Korea said it detonated the hydrogen bomb and came six days after the council strongly condemned what it called Pyongyang’s “outrageous” launch of a ballistic missile over Japan. Less than a month ago, the council imposed its stiffest sanctions yet on Kim Jong Un’s reclusive nation.

Still, the U.S. resolution faces an uncertain future. Russia and China have both proposed a two-pronged approach: North Korea would suspend its nuclear and missile developmen­t, and the United States and South Korea would suspend their joint military exercises.

Washington and Seoul say the maneuvers are defensive, but Pyongyang views them as a rehearsal for invasion. The North recently requested a Security Council meeting about the war games.

The U.S. says there is no comparison between its openly conducted, internatio­nally monitored military drills and North Korea’s weapons programs, which the internatio­nal community has banned.

Russian Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia told reporters after the meeting that sanctions alone will not solve the issue and that negotiatio­ns are needed as well.

“Resolution­s aimed solely at sanctionin­g North Korea have not worked well before,” he said.

Diplomats from France, Britain, Italy and other countries reiterated demands for the Kim regime to halt its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programs and urged further sanctions.

French Ambassador Francois Delattre said France was urging the adoption of new U.N. sanctions, swift implementa­tion of existing ones and new, separate sanctions by the European Union.

“Pyongyang poses a clear threat to internatio­nal peace and security and is increasing­ly and seriously challengin­g the global nonprolife­ration regime,” said Ambassador Sebastiano Cardi of Italy, which heads the North Korea sanctions compliance committee. He noted that North Korea is the only country to have tested a nuclear device in the 21st century.

The North trumpeted that its sixth nuclear test blast since 2006 was a “perfect success.”

The council aimed to take a big bite out of the North Korean economy earlier this month by banning the North from exporting coal, iron, lead and seafood. Together, those are worth about a third of the country’s $3 billion in exports last year.

The council could look to sanction other profitable North Korean exports, such as textiles. Another possibilit­y could be tighter limits on North Korean laborers abroad; the recent sanctions barred giving any new permits for such workers. The United States suggested other ideas earlier this summer, including air and maritime restrictio­ns and restrictin­g oil to North Korea’s military and weapons programs.

 ??  ?? South Korea’s United Nations Ambassador Cho Tae-yul, left, meets with U.N. Ambassador­s Matthew John Rycroft of the U.K., center, and Nikki Haley of the U.S. after the U.N. Security Council’s non-proliferat­ion meeting on North Korea on Monday at U.N....
South Korea’s United Nations Ambassador Cho Tae-yul, left, meets with U.N. Ambassador­s Matthew John Rycroft of the U.K., center, and Nikki Haley of the U.S. after the U.N. Security Council’s non-proliferat­ion meeting on North Korea on Monday at U.N....

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