USA TODAY US Edition

Parents push N. Korea terror label

- Deirdre Shesgreen

Otto Warmbier’s parents have taken their case against North Korea to Washington, pressing lawmakers in private meetings this week to designate that reclusive country as a state sponsor of terrorism.

It’s a cause the Wyoming, Ohio, couple embraced in the wake of their son’s death in June, shortly after he was released from North Korea with severe brain damage. North Korea imprisoned Otto Warmbier for more than a year, detaining the one-time college student as he was preparing to leave the country.

At the urging of Fred and Cindy Warmbier, 12 senators — six Republican­s and six Democrats — sent a letter to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Monday, asking him to put North Korea on the list of countries that the USA considers sponsors of terrorism.

“This is something the Warmbiers are very interested in,” said Sen. Rob Portman, ROhio, who led the letter along with Sen. Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat. Other signers include Sens. Sherrod Brown, D- Ohio; Ted Cruz, R-Texas; and Marco Rubio, R-Fla.

The Warmbiers met this week with Portman and Brown, as well as several lawmakers on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

North Korea was listed as a state sponsor of terrorism for two decades, from 1988 until 2008. The George W. Bush administra­tion took the country off the list as part of an agreement with North Korea to curb its nuclear weapons program.

“Of course, North Korea didn’t follow through on the commitment­s they had made on the nuclear program, and yet this designatio­n never was renewed,” Portman said in an Wednesday. He said North Ko- rea’s dealings with Iran should be enough to justify putting them back on the list, not to mention their recent missile tests and other aggression­s.

In their letter to Tillerson, Portman and the other senators note that North Korea has “consistent­ly shown a disregard” for internatio­nal agreements, “reviving its pursuit of nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them.”

The senators also asked Tillerson to take into account North Korea’s treatment of detained U.S. citizens, although they did not mention Otto Warmbier specifical­ly. Warmbier was in North Korea as part of a tour group when he was detained and charged with hostile acts against the government.

After a sham trial, he was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for allegedly stealing a poster from a staff-only section of a hotel in North Korea.

Putting North Korea on the terrorist-sponsor list would give the United States another pressure point against North Korea. It would also be a “diplomatic setback” for the country, Marc Thiessen, a former Bush aide and foreign policy expert, wrote in a recent op-ed arguing in favor of the move.

“We owe it to the world to list North Korea as a state sponsor of terror,” said Fred Warmbier.

 ?? PROVIDED BY CHRIS COLLOTON ?? Otto Warmbier died after returning from North Korea in June.
PROVIDED BY CHRIS COLLOTON Otto Warmbier died after returning from North Korea in June.

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