The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Tillerson’s offer depends on North Korea, Trump

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Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s surprising diplomatic offer of unconditio­nal talks with North Korea hinges on two big X factors: Does the North even want talks, and is President Donald Trump fully behind his top diplomat?

Tillerson’s overture came two weeks after North Korea tested a missile that could potentiall­y carry a nuclear warhead to the U.S. Eastern Seaboard — a capability it has strove for decades to master.

Trump has vowed to stop the reclusive government from reaching its goal, using military force if necessary.

After months of pressure tactics and military threats, many via presidenti­al tweet, the new U.S. posture appears to reflect the Trump administra­tion’s official policy of “maximum pressure and engagement.’’ China, which has urged dialogue, and U.S. ally South Korea, which fears disruption to the Winter Olympics it hosts in February, both welcomed Tillerson’s proposal.

“We are ready to talk anytime North Korea would like to talk. And we are ready to have the first meeting without preconditi­ons,’’ Tillerson said at the Atlantic Council think-tank on Tuesday, adding that the North would need to pause its weapons testing.

Trump has described North Korea as the nation’s most pressing national security crisis.

Over most of his tenure, he has focused on pressuring Kim Jong Un’s authoritar­ian government to abandon its weapons of mass destructio­n pursuit, through economic restrictio­ns and diplomatic isolation.

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