The Palm Beach Post

N. Korea back on terrorism list

Trump’s designatio­n against ‘murderous regime’ will include tougher sanctions.

- By Matthew Pennington and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump announced Monday the U.S. is putting North Korea’s “murderous regime” on America’s terrorism blacklist, despite questions about Pyongyang’s support for internatio­nal attacks beyond the assassinat­ion of its leader’s half brother in February.

Trump said the designatio­n as a state sponsor of terror was long overdue, and he promised a new wave of sanctions as part of a “maximum pressure campaign” over North Korea’s developmen­t of nuclear weapons that could soon pose a direc t threat to the U.S. mainland.

North Korea will join Iran, Sudan and Syria on the blacklist. The North had been designated for two decades until 2008 when it was removed in a bid to salvage internatio­nal talks aimed at halting its nuclear efforts. The talks collapsed soon after and haven’t been revived since.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the designatio­n was a “very symbolic move” with limited practical effects, although it could close a “few loopholes” in a tough sanctions regime that was starting to bite in Pyongyang. He said anecdotal evidence and intelligen­ce suggest the North is suffering fuel shortages, with queues at gas stations, and its revenues are down.

Still, Tillerson also acknowledg­ed a two-month pause in the North’s rapid tempo of nuclear and missile tests and said there was still hope for diplomacy. With tougher sanctions in the offing, he warned North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, ‘This is only going to get worse until you’re ready to come and talk.”

The designatio­n is likely to exacerbate sour relations bet ween Washington and Pyongyang that have turned uglier with name-calling between Trump and Kim. There was strong bipartisan support for the move in Congress, which had passed legislatio­n in August requiring the State Department to make a determinat­ion on the issue.

“In addition to threatenin­g the world by nuclear devastatio­n, North Korea has repeatedly supported acts of internatio­nal terrorism, including assassinat­ions on foreign soil,” Trump said as he announced the designatio­n at a Cabinet meeting at the White House.

The action had been debated for months inside the administra­tion, with some officials at the State Department arguing that North Korea did not meet the legal standard to be relisted as a state sponsor of terrorism.

U.S. officials involved in the internal deliberati­ons said there was no debate over whether the slaying of Kim’s half brother Kim Jong-nam was a terrorist act. Malaysian authoritie­s have said he was killed by two women who smeared suspected VX nerve agent onto his face at Kuala Lumpur’s airport Feb. 13.

Lawyers said there had to be more than one incident, and there was disagreeme­nt over whether the treatment of American student Otto Warmbier, who died of injuries suf- fered in North Korean custody, constitute­d terrorism.

Tillerson said more sanctions would be imposed on North Korea and “related persons” that the Treasury Department would begin to announce today — part of a rolling effort to deprive Pyongyang of funds for its nuclear and missile programs and leave it internatio­nally isolated.

“It will be the highest level of sanctions by the time it’s finished over a t wo-week period,” Trump said.

North Korea is already subject to an array of tough U.S. and U.N. sanctions restrictin­g trade, foreign assistance, defense sales and exports of sensitive technology.

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