San Francisco Chronicle

Asia trip:

- By Matthew Pennington Matthew Pennington is an Associated Press writer.

Secretary of state, visiting Japan, says North Korea “need not fear” the U.S.

TOKYO — Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called on North Korea on Thursday to abandon its nuclear and ballistic missile programs, saying the isolated nation “need not fear” the United States.

Tillerson made that declaratio­n after meeting Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida in Tokyo, where they discussed possible new approaches in dealing with Pyongyang.

He said 20 years of U.S. diplomatic and other efforts to get North Korea to denucleari­ze have failed, but gave no specifics about how the Trump administra­tion, which is currently doing a policy review, would tackle the issue. Tillerson described the weapons programs as “dangerous and unlawful.”

The former Exxon Mobil CEO is making his first trip to Asia as the top U.S. diplomat. Tensions are running high on the divided Korean Peninsula, and North Korea last week launched four missiles into seas off Japan and where the U.S. is currently conducting annual military drills with South Korea. Pyongyang views this as a rehearsal for invasion.

“North Korea and its people need not fear the United States or their neighbors in the region who seek only to live in peace with North Korea,” the secretary of state told a news conference in Tokyo. “With this in mind, the United States calls on North Korea to abandon its nuclear and ballistic missile programs and refrain from any further provocatio­n.”

He later met separately with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

In Beijing, a North Korean diplomat said Thursday that Pyongyang must act in selfdefens­e against the U.S.South Korea military drills, which he said have brought the region to the brink of nuclear war. He said the drills were aimed at using atomic weapons for a preemptive strike against North Korea. Washington says the maneuvers are routine and defensive.

“The United States holds a joint military exercise every year to push the situation on the Korean Peninsula to a serious situation, and that is the source of the super tough measures we must take,” Pak Myong Ho told reporters in a rare briefing at the North Korean Embassy in the Chinese capital.

North Korea has accelerate­d its weapons developmen­t in violation of multiple U.N. Security Council resolution­s and despite tough sanctions levied against it. Last year, the North conducted two nuclear test explosions and 24 ballistic missile tests. Experts say it could have a nucleartip­ped missile that could reach the United States within a few years.

Citing the continued North Korean missile launches this year, Tillerson said that “in the face of this ever-escalating threat it is clear that a different approach is required.” He said his trip was intended to get input from other government­s. Tillerson, who is traveling without the usual contingent of journalist­s who normally cover the secretary of state, will be in South Korea on Friday and then China on Saturday.

Both Tillerson and Kishida urged China to use its economic leverage with North Korea to push it to change course.

 ?? Toru Yamanaka/ Associated Press ?? Secretary of State Rex Tillerson shakes hands with his Japanese counterpar­t, Fumio Kishida, at the end of a joint press conference in Tokyo.
Toru Yamanaka/ Associated Press Secretary of State Rex Tillerson shakes hands with his Japanese counterpar­t, Fumio Kishida, at the end of a joint press conference in Tokyo.

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