Bangkok Post

US ‘could act alone against North Korea’

Trump says he can address nuke threat

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said the US can “totally” address North Korea’s nuclear threat unilateral­ly if China doesn’t cooperate to put pressure on that nation, according to the Financial Times.

“If China is not going to solve North Korea, we will. That is all I am telling you,” Mr Trump said in an interview published on Sunday. When pressed about whether he could do it one-on-one without China’s help, the president said, “I don’t have to say any more. Totally.”

The comments come ahead of Mr Trump’s planned summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping at the president’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida. The North Korean threat is expected to take centre stage at the April 6-7 talks. Mr Trump said he’ll discuss North Korea and the scope for cooperatio­n when he hosts the Chinese leader.

“China has great influence over North Korea,” Mr Trump said in the interview. “And China will either decide to help us with North Korea, or they won’t.” Cooperatio­n with the US “will be very good for China”, he said.

If they don’t cooperate, “it won’t be good for anyone”.

China has backed North Korea since a war on the peninsula in the 1950s, in part to prevent having a US ally on its border. While Beijing’s leaders have enforced some United Nations-backed sanctions on North Korea after a series of nuclear and ballistic missile tests, China accounts for more than 90% of its total trade.

South Korean intelligen­ce has warned that North Korea could conduct its sixth nuclear bomb test this week to “overshadow” the summit between Mr Xi and Mr Trump.

Mr Trump declined to reveal how he’d pursue the subject, or whether he would begin the talks with the Chinese president by bringing up North Korea and then pivoting to trade with China.

He suggested a change in strategy from the past, saying his predecesso­rs telegraphe­d their actions such as military strikes in the Middle East.

“I am not the United States of the past where we tell you where we are going to hit in the Middle East,” Mr Trump said. “Why are they talking? There is no reason to talk.”

The review of options on North Korea that Mr Trump ordered after his inaugurati­on is complete, the FT reported, citing two unidentifi­ed people familiar with the review.

It had been accelerate­d to have options ready for the summit with Mr Xi, one of the people said, according to the FT.

“My guess is that this review will be more like a menu of options and that this might include negotiatio­ns,” said John Delury, an associate professor of Chinese studies at Yonsei University Graduate School of Internatio­nal Studies in Seoul.

“If you look at what Trump actually said, he leaves all of us guessing. The surprise factor is sort of a key element in his North Korea policy.”

In the interview, Mr Trump said while he believes in alliances and partnershi­ps, they “have not always worked out very well” for the US.

The president also indicated that he would postpone a discussion with the Chinese president on tariffs until “perhaps the next time we meet.”

Still, Mr Trump offered this criticism: “When you talk about currency manipulati­on, when you talk about devaluatio­ns, they are world champions.”

Mr Trump vowed during the presidenti­al campaign to have China labelled a currency manipulato­r on his first day in office, which didn’t happen.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has signalled no urgency to act, saying he wants to use a regular review of foreignexc­hange markets to determine whether the US’ largest trading partner is cheating.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross declined to address Mr Trump’s campaign pledge during an appearance on CNN’s State of the Union on Sunday, saying the determinat­ion lies with the Treasury Department.

 ?? EPA ?? South Korean marines participat­e in an annual amphibious operations during the annual Foal Eagle exercises against a possible attack from N Korea, in Pohang, 360km southeast of Seoul, on Sunday. The annual exercises with US Combined Forces Command last...
EPA South Korean marines participat­e in an annual amphibious operations during the annual Foal Eagle exercises against a possible attack from N Korea, in Pohang, 360km southeast of Seoul, on Sunday. The annual exercises with US Combined Forces Command last...

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