The Star Malaysia

Diplomats discuss N. Korean threat

US, S. Korea and Japan unite to solve issue

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SEOUL: Senior officials from the United States, South Korea and Japan reaffirmed their countries’ commitment to finding a diplomatic solution to the threat posed by North Korea’s rapidly expanding nuclear programme. However, US Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan stressed that the allies must be prepared for any contingenc­y.

After meeting with his South Korean and Japanese counterpar­ts in Seoul, Sullivan said the United States continues to view diplomacy, supported by pressure and sanctions, as the primary means for solving the North Korean nuclear problem. But despite that approach, the Trump administra­tion will continue to keep “all options on the table” because the “regime in Pyongyang is unpredicta­ble and non-transparen­t”, he said.

“Our objective is, throughout that campaign of pressure, to bring North Korea to the negotiatin­g table without preconditi­ons so that we can achieve our objective of a denucleari­sed Korean peninsula,” Sullivan said at a news conference after the meeting, where the officials mainly discussed responses to North Korea’s nuclear activities.

“Diplomacy is our primary objective and primary means to addressing the threat posed by North Korea. But we need to be prepared to respond to any eventualit­y given the unpredicta­ble nature of the regime in Pyongyang.”

Before flying to Seoul for talks with South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Lim Sung-nam, Sullivan and Japanese Deputy Foreign Minister Shinsuke Sugiyama met in Tokyo on Tuesday and vowed to find more ways to apply pressure on North Korea.

Yesterday, Lim said the allies agree that the situation surroundin­g the Korean peninsula should be “managed stably”.

The vice-ministeria­l discussion­s were followed by a meeting of the countries’ top envoys for currently stalled nuclear disarmamen­t talks with North Korea that also involved China and Russia. The six-party talks were last held in late 2008 and North Korea went on to conduct its second nuclear test in May 2009.

The Seoul meetings came as the United States and South Korea conduct joint naval drills involving fighter jets, submarines and other naval vessels, including the aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, to train for potential North Korean provocatio­ns. The allies regularly conduct joint exercises that North Korea condemns as invasion rehearsals.

North Korea in recent months has tested purported thermonucl­ear weapons and interconti­nental missiles and launched two midrange missiles over Japan while also threatenin­g to fire similar weapons towards Guam, a Pacific US territory and military hub. — AP

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