Yuma Sun

Trump sows confusion by rejecting idea of NKorea talks

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WASHINGTON — True to form, President Donald Trump sowed policy confusion with a tweet.

Declaring Wednesday that “talking is not the answer” on North Korea, Trump’s message appeared to clash with efforts by his Cabinet members to safeguard the possibilit­y of a diplomatic solution as Kim Jong-Un’s military races toward mastering a nuclear-tipped missile that can reach America.

The president’s morning tweet came a day after a highly provocativ­e North Korean missile test that flew over Japan, a close American ally, potentiall­y endangerin­g civilians on the ground. On Wednesday, Kim called for more weapons launches in the Pacific.

“The U.S. has been talking to North Korea, and paying them extortion money, for 25 years. Talking is not the answer!” Trump tweeted.

The statement raised fresh uncertaint­y about the Trump administra­tion’s strategy for North Korea. How the U.S. plans address the North’s growing nuclear capabiliti­es is of increasing urgency not just in Northeast Asia, but also in the United States. Last month, the isolated, communist country tested for the first time a missile that could potentiall­y strike the U.S. mainland.

Trump didn’t spell out what he meant by “extortion,” but he appeared to be referring to the $1.3 billion the U.S. has provided in aid to North Korea since 1995. Most of that has been food and fuel.

Criticism of past administra­tions’ failures to halt North Korea’s march toward nuclear weapons has been a recurrent theme from Trump. However, his comment overlooked that fact there’s been virtually no U.S. aid to North Korea since early 2009. Talks also have been in limbo for years. The last formal negotiatio­n between Washington and Pyongyang on the nuclear issue occurred in 2012.

Eliminatin­g the possibilit­y of new negotiatio­ns could limit U.S. options. It also risks increasing the chance of military confrontat­ion between nuclear-armed powers.

Within hours of Trump’s tweet, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis appeared to contradict him. “We’re never out of diplomatic solutions,” Mattis said as he met with his counterpar­t from South Korea for talks on military readiness.

The U.S.-allied government supports, in theory, greater diplomatic outreach to Pyongyang. If war were to ever break out, millions of South Koreans would immediatel­y find themselves within range of the North’s large convention­al weapons arsenal.

In Geneva, Robert Wood, the U.S. ambassador to the Conference on Disarmamen­t, sought to explain the president’s tweet.

Trump was expressing his frustratio­n at North Korea’s “dangerous and provocativ­e threats,” Wood said. But like Mattis, he said the U.S. remained willing to discuss the North’s denucleari­zation.

“The United States is open to trying to deal with this question diplomatic­ally, but the other side is not,” Wood told reporters.

It’s not the first time Trump has complicate­d his administra­tion’s national security message via social media.

Last month, as aides worked to defuse tensions between Qatar and its Arab neighbors, Trump blindsided them by tweeting that Qatar funded terrorism. The gas-rich monarchy hosts 11,000 U.S. troops.

Trump also surprised officials with tweets on Russia and banning transgende­r people in the military.

Supporters of U.S. engagement with North Korea argue that periods when the U.S. is talking and providing aid to the country have proved the most successful in curbing its weapons developmen­t. In the past five years, without formal talks, the North’s technologi­cal strides have been most rapid.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson last week hinted at possible direct talks if North Korea demonstrat­ed its sincerity by stopping weapons tests. The U.S. also has been maintainin­g a diplomatic back channel with North Korea.

The immediate outlook for diplomacy, however, appears bleak. On Wednesday, North Korea’s Kim called for more weapons launches into the Pacific Ocean. The Korean Central News Agency said the launch that overflew Japan was of an intermedia­te-range missile that the North first successful­ly tested in May and threatened to fire into waters near Guam earlier this month. It described the launch as a “muscle-flexing” countermea­sure to U.S.-South Korean military drills that conclude Thursday.

 ?? KRT VIA AP VIDEO ?? IN THIS IMAGE MADE FROM VIDEO of a news bulletin aired by North Korean government broadcaste­r KRT on Wednesday, leader Kim Jong-Un looks up at the sky at what is said to have been a missile launch Tuesday at an undisclose­d location in North Korea.
KRT VIA AP VIDEO IN THIS IMAGE MADE FROM VIDEO of a news bulletin aired by North Korean government broadcaste­r KRT on Wednesday, leader Kim Jong-Un looks up at the sky at what is said to have been a missile launch Tuesday at an undisclose­d location in North Korea.

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