Toronto Star

Canada, U.S. to co-host internatio­nal meeting on nuclear crisis

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WASHINGTON— Canada will assist the United States in co-hosting a major internatio­nal meeting on North Korea in an attempt to find a non-military solution to a nuclear crisis, which escalated Tuesday with a recordsett­ing missile test by the rogue state. They will convene foreign ministers from the countries involved in the Korean War and from important regional actors like Japan in a meeting whose date has not been set but which will likely occur in Canada early next year.

The conference had been under discussion for weeks between Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland and her U.S. counterpar­t, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and they chose to announce it late Tuesday after North Korea carried out its longest-ever missile test.

A meeting of this magnitude “hasn’t been done before,” one Canadian official said. A statement by the U.S. State Department said: “Diplomatic options remain viable and open, for now.” It said the U.S. remains committed to finding a peaceful path to denucleari­zation and to ending belligeren­t actions by North Korea.

That message stands in contrast to recent remarks from the U.S. president. Donald Trump has expressed skepticism that diplomacy might work and even questioned the point of his secretary of state participat­ing in political talks. Trump was curt in public comments Tuesday.

“I will only tell you that we will take care of it,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “It is a situation that we will handle.”

He made the remarks during a meeting attended by U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis, who added context about what had just occurred. Mattis said that mid-day, Washington time, North Korea fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile into the Sea of Japan. He said it represente­d a milestone in North Ko- rea’s decades-old nuclear program, which has been used in the past to build leverage and extract concession­s from other countries.

The North said in a special televised announceme­nt that it successful­ly fired what it called the Hwasong-15, a new nuclear-capable ICBM that’s “significan­tly more” powerful than the North’s previously tested longrange weapon. The missile travelled about 1,000 km, flew for 53 minutes, and landed within 370 nautical km of Japan’s coast.

In a statement, Freeland called this latest launch a “reckless and dangerous act” that presents a “direct threat to the world” that cannot be tolerated.

 ??  ?? Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland said the latest launch cannot be tolerated.
Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland said the latest launch cannot be tolerated.

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