The Scotsman

‘Maybe fire and fury wasn’t tough enough’

● Trump ratchets up the rhetoric as Korean missile crisis escalates

- By JONATHAN LEMIRE in New Jersey

US President Donald Trump has said that perhaps his “fire and fury” warning to North Korea “wasn’t tough enough”.

Mr Trump said North Korea had “better get their act together or they are going to be in trouble like few nations have ever been in trouble”.

The US president was addressing reporters during his holiday at his New Jersey golf club before a security briefing with top advisers.

It is the latest warning since he said earlier this week that North Korea faces “retaliatio­n with fire and fury unlike any the world has seen before”.

North Korea has said it may attack the US Pacific territory of Guam in retaliatio­n.

Referring to his comments earlier in the week Mr Trump said: “Maybe that statement wasn’t tough enough.”

He said North Korea had been “getting away with a tragedy that can’t be allowed”.

But he declined to say whether the US was considerin­g a pre-emptive military strike, arguing that his administra­tion never discusses such deliberati­ons publicly. Mr Trump said it was time that somebody stood up to the pariah nation.

Flanked by US vice president Mike Pence, he said: “It may very well be tougher than I said.”

Mr Trump said the US “of course” would always consider negotiatio­ns with North Korea, but added that negotiatio­ns with the North have failed for the last 25 years. He accused his predecesso­rs of failing to effectivel­y address the North Korea problem.

Alluding to the threats against Guam, Mr Trump said if North Korea took any steps to even think about an attack, it would have reason to be nervous. “Things will happen to them like they never thought possible, OK?” Mr Trump said. Of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, Mr Trump added: “He’s been pushing the world around for a long time.” 2 South Korean soldiers walk by a mock North Korean missile in Seoul yesterday An inflatable 3

version of Donald Trump as a chicken

appeared outside the White House

North Korea yesterday announced a detailed plan to launch a salvo of ballistic missiles toward Guam.

The announceme­nt included the claim that the North is finalising a plan to fire four of its Hwasong-12 missiles over Japan and into waters around the tiny island, which hosts 7,000 US military personnel on two main bases and has a population of 160,000.

It said the plan could be sent to Mr Kim for approval within a week.

Japan and South Korea vowed a strong reaction if the North were to go through with the plan.

The plan involves the missiles hitting waters 19 to 25 miles from the island. It is unclear whether – or exactly why – North Korea would risk firing missiles so close to US territory. Such a launch would almost compel the US to attempt an intercept and pos- sibly generate further escalation.

North Korea, no stranger to bluffing, frequently uses extremely bellicose rhetoric with warnings of military action to keep its adversarie­s on their heels.

It generally couches its threats with language stating it will not attack the United States unless it has been attacked first or has determined an attack is imminent.

But the statement raised worries amid threats from both sides.

Guam lies about 2,100 miles from the Korean Peninsula, and it is extremely unlikely Mr Kim’s government would risk annihilati­on with a pre-emptive attack on US citizens.

It is also unclear how reliable North Korea’s missiles would be against a distant target.

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