Sun.Star Cebu

TRUMP WARNS NORTH KOREA OF ‘FIRE, FURY’

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Warning of “fire and fury,” President Donald Trump answered North Korea’s threats with rhetoric the nuclear-armed nation might appreciate. The risk now is the tough talk leading to war.

Trump’s foray into North Korea-style bombast injects new uncertaint­y into the increasing­ly fragile, six-decade-old truce between the United States and the communist country.

His talk of military action “like the world has never seen” jars with the message of top American officials to cooperate with China on pressuring North Korea and ultimately seeking diplomatic negotiatio­ns.

The type of threats Trump issued are routine from the isolated, Stalinist state, which often speaks of turning neighbor South Korea’s capital into a “sea of fire” and warns of “merciless” and unpreceden­ted attacks on its enemies, including nuclear strikes on the United States.

The bombast is so frequent that it is difficult to judge the seriousnes­s, particular­ly as the North has not used its massive convention­al arms stockpiles against its neighbors or U.S. military bases in South Korea and Japan.

Trump, too, has earned a reputation for exaggerati­on and sometimes unsubstant­iated policy directives, often delivered via Twitter.

On Tuesday, Trump told reporters: “North Korea best not make any more threats to the United States.”

His critics were quick to pounce, suggesting he risked playing into North Korean efforts to divide the U.S. from its military-averse allies in Asia and reinforcin­g claims that Washington isn’t interested in nuclear disarmamen­t, and really wants to oust the Kim family dynasty.

“You got to be sure you can do what you say you’re going to do,” Republican Sen. John McCain, a frequent Trump critic, said of the president’s comments. “That kind of rhetoric, I’m not sure it helps. The great leaders I’ve seen don’t threaten unless they’re ready to act and I’m not sure that President Trump is ready to act.”

North Korea experts have long advised against overtly hostile threats to the North, particular­ly given how little is known about the country’s unpredicta­ble young leader, Kim Jong Un, and his stewardshi­p of the world’s largest standing army.

Markets Tuesday showed no reaction to Trump’s threat. And there was no indication the Pentagon was adjusting its military posture.

North Korea did return Trump’s threats with tough rhetoric of its own, with an unnamed army spokesman issuing a “serious warning” to the U.S.

The spokesman was quoted in state media talking about “enveloping” America’s Pacific territory of Guam in missile fire to counteract U.S. bombers that are based there and fly over South Korea — and “get on the nerves” of the North.

Although it wasn’t clear if Trump and the Koreans were responding directly to each other, the heightened rhetoric added to the potential for a miscalcula­tion that might bring the nuclear-armed nations into conflict.

Trump spoke after The Wash- ington Post reported that U.S. intelligen­ce officials believes the North can now fit a nuclear bomb on a missile, taking its claims of being able to punish the United States with an atomic attack closer to reality.

Its recent tests of interconti­nental missiles appear, after years of North Korean efforts, to have finally put the U.S. in range.

It wasn’t clear what threats Trump was referring to when he addressed reporters Tuesday.

On Monday, Pyongyang blasted a new set of U.N. sanctions against the country, saying it would make the U.S. pay a “thousand-fold for all the heinous crimes” committed against North Korea.

Democrats accused Trump of making a dangerous situation worse.

“North Korea is a real threat, but the President’s unhinged reaction suggests he might consider using American nuclear weapons,” said Rep. Eliot Engel, a Democrat.

 ?? AP FOTO ?? WARNING. President Donald Trump talks about North Korea during a briefing on the opioid crisis. He warned of military action “like the world has never seen.”
AP FOTO WARNING. President Donald Trump talks about North Korea during a briefing on the opioid crisis. He warned of military action “like the world has never seen.”
 ?? AP FOTO ?? KOREAN LEADER. A man walks by a TV screen showing a local news program with a file image of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at Seoul Train Station in South Korea.
AP FOTO KOREAN LEADER. A man walks by a TV screen showing a local news program with a file image of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at Seoul Train Station in South Korea.

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