Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

National security adviser stresses N. Korea threat

McMaster says administra­tion keeping all options on table

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BRIDGEWATE­R, N.J. - President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, is stressing that it is “impossible to overstate the danger” posed by North Korea.

In an interview with MSNBC’s Hugh Hewitt that aired Saturday, McMaster said Trump has been “deeply briefed” on the strategy on North Korea. Tensions have mounted with Pyongyang’s two recent successful tests of interconti­nental ballistic missiles.

McMaster reiterated the administra­tion’s position that all options, including a targeted military strike, are on the table. Still, he acknowledg­ed this “would be a very costly war, ... in terms of the suffering of mainly the South Korean people.”

McMaster continued: “So what we have to do is — is everything we can to — to pressure this regime, to pressure Kim Jong Un and those around him such that they conclude it is in their interest to denucleari­ze.”

The comments came as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is in the Philippine­s for a regional summit that is expected to focus heavily on concerns with North Korea. Tillerson has no plans to sit down with North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho at the event.

Tillerson’s reluctance to meet with his North Korean counterpar­t is despite his growing push for Pyongyang to return to the negotiatin­g table with the U.S. Tillerson said this week that such talks would have to be predicated on the North giving up its nuclear weapons aspiration­s.

Meanwhile, the U.N. Security Council on Saturday unanimousl­y approved new sanctions on North Korea, including banning exports worth over $1 billion. The U.S.drafted measure, negotiated with North Korea’s neighbor and ally China, is aimed at increasing economic pressure on Pyongyang to return to negotiatio­ns on its nuclear and missile programs.

The Security Council has already imposed six rounds of sanctions that have failed to halt North Korea’s drive to improve its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons capabiliti­es.

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