Porterville Recorder

In Japan, Trump to try to put human face on Nkorean menace

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After easing into his Asian debut with golf and a taste of home, President Donald Trump is trying to put a human face on North Korea’s menace, hearing from anguished families of Japanese citizens snatched by Pyongyang’s agents.

Trump’s meeting Monday promises to elevate these heart-wrenching tales of loss to the internatio­nal stage as he hopes to pressure North Korea to end its provocativ­e behavior toward American allies in the region.

North Korea has acknowledg­ed apprehendi­ng 13 Japanese in the 1970s and 1980s, but claims all those captives have died or been released. But in Japan, where grieving relatives of the abducted have become a symbol of heartbreak on the scale of American POW families, the government insists nearly 50 people were taken - and believes some may be alive.

Trump has delivered harsh denunciati­ons of the renegade North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, belittling him as “Little Rocket Man” and threatenin­g to rain “fire and fury” on his country if the belligeren­ce continues. But Trump also has begun highlighti­ng the plight of the North Koreans.

“I think they’re great people. They’re industriou­s. They’re warm, much warmer than the world really knows or understand­s,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One while flying to Japan on Sunday. “And I hope it all works out for everybody.”

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