USA TODAY US Edition

North Korea ‘begging for war,’ U.S. warns

Envoy Haley steps up pressure on U.N.

- John Bacon

North Korea is “begging for war,” and the United Nations must exhaust all diplomatic means to halt the expansion of the North’s nuclear program before it’s too late, U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley said at an emergency meeting of the Security Council on Monday.

“Enough is enough,” Haley said, one day after North Korea’s sixth and by far most powerful nuclear test. “We have kicked the can down the road long enough. There is no more road left.”

Haley said the United States would be circulatin­g a proposal for new, tougher sanctions, and she dismissed “freeze for freeze” proposals from China and Russia. Those nations are calling for North Korea to halt nuclear developmen­t in exchange for a halt in U.S.-South Korean joint military exercises and removal of a U.S. anti-missile system from the peninsula.

Haley also sounded a recurring theme from the Trump administra­tion that China must use its sway with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to halt his nuclear program. About 90% of North Korea’s foreign trade is with China.

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

The U.N. has enacted a series of harsh economic sanctions over more than two decades that have left North Korea as one of the world’s poorest nations, yet have failed to halt Pyongyang ’s drive to join the nuclear community. Russia and China have expressed doubt that additional sanctions will move the needle with Kim.

On Sunday, North Korea conducted its sixth nuclear test and first in almost a year. Pyongyang claimed it tested a miniaturiz­ed

North Korea announced Sunday that it conducted its sixth nuclear test. Here’s a look at each of its attempts to join the nuclear weapons club:

OCT. 9, 2006

After years of saying it could do so, North Korea became the ninth country to test a nuclear weapon. Like all its tests, it took place in undergroun­d tunnels in a remote, mountainou­s region. Experts estimated the plutonium explosion measured less than 1 kiloton, or approximat­ely one-tenth the size of the atomic bomb the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. Although the test was described by internatio­nal monitors as a “fizzle,” it prompted the United Nations Security Council to impose economic sanctions.

MAY 25, 2009

Its second nuclear test took place when President Barack Obama was in office for just four months. The test was immediatel­y hailed by North Korea’s state news agency as a “new higher level in terms of its explosive power and technology of its control.” Its estimated explosive yield was 2 to 8 kilotons. A month earlier, the communist nation launched a satellite into space that many viewed as an attempt to demonstrat­e it would soon be capable of striking the U.S. with a long-range missile. The U.N. Security Council responded by imposing fresh sanctions that banned all weapons exports from North Korea and all imports apart from small arms.

FEB. 13, 2013

For the first time, North Korea alleged that it conducted a successful nuclear test using a uranium-enriched device. Although never confirmed, it marked a potentiall­y dangerous new developmen­t for its nuclear ambitions because it meant scientists may have learned how to miniaturiz­e bombs that could be placed atop long-range missiles. The use of uranium would also allow North Korea to stockpile bombs, not possible with plutonium because of its limited supply. The Security Council, which had banned satellite launches in December 2012, added a fourth resolution that expanded rights to inspect cargo ships and further restricted North Korea’s financial transactio­ns.

JAN. 6, 2016

North Korea announced it had successful­ly tested its first hydrogen bomb, a much more powerful device. But the U.S. and other government­s have doubted that claim. Experts aren’t sure whether the device was miniaturiz­ed. The ability to detonate a hydrogen bomb is a great concern because they unleash massive amounts of energy by using nuclear fusion. An H-bomb uses an atomic (fission) bomb as a trigger. Sanctions were expanded to include individual diplomats, companies and institutio­ns. The U.N. Security Council also banned countries from supplying aviation fuel and other bomb-producing natural resources to North Korea. The sanctions were bolstered by support from China, North Korea’s economic lifeline.

SEPT. 9, 2016

North Korea’s fifth test reflected its determinat­ion to be a nuclear-armed country despite ever tougher sanctions. North Korea said the latest test is of a nuclear warhead designed to be mounted on ballistic missiles. That claim was not immediatel­y verified as accurate. It drew a strong rebuke from ally China, which said it would protest the test with North Korea’s ambassador in Beijing.

SEPT. 3, 2017

North Korea’s state-run broadcaste­r said the country had successful­ly conducted a test of a hydrogen bomb that can be loaded onto its new interconti­nental ballistic missiles. The claim that it was a hydrogen bomb and that it could be loaded on a missile could not immediatel­y be confirmed in the West, but South Korea estimated the test to have a strength of 100 kilotons. That yield would be five-to-10 times more powerful than the 2016 test. President Trump tweeted that “North Korea is a rogue nation which has become a great threat and embarrassm­ent to China, which is trying to help but with little success.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS, AP ?? “Enough is enough,” Nikki Haley told the U.N. Security Council after another North Korean nuclear test.
BEBETO MATTHEWS, AP “Enough is enough,” Nikki Haley told the U.N. Security Council after another North Korean nuclear test.
 ?? AP ?? North Korean soldiers turn and look toward their leader Kim Jong Un during a ceremony marking the 60th anniversar­y of the Korean War armistice on July 27, 2013.
AP North Korean soldiers turn and look toward their leader Kim Jong Un during a ceremony marking the 60th anniversar­y of the Korean War armistice on July 27, 2013.

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