Tillerson hints at tougher tack with North Korea
TOKYO — U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson hinted Thursday at a tougher strategy to confront North Korea’s nuclear threat but said Pyongyang had no need to fear the United States, an alternately threatening and reassuring message that suggested the Trump administration is still formulating a clear policy.
In Japan at the start of a three-country Asia tour, Tillerson offered no details about what would comprise the “different approach” to North Korea the U.S. will pursue. He pointedly noted that 20 years of “diplomatic and other efforts” had failed to dissuade the isolated communist government from developing its nuclear program, which he called an “ever-escalating threat.”
Speaking alongside Japanese Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida, Tillerson recited the longstanding U.S. demand that the North “abandon its nuclear and ballistic missile programs and refrain from any further provocation.”
He said his visit to Asia was designed to “exchange views on a new approach,” echoing the comments of others in Washington, who’ve said President Donald Trump wants to examine all options — including military ones — for halting the North’s weapons programs before it becomes capable of developing a nuclear-tipped missile that could reach the U.S. mainland.
But if Tillerson’s words were meant to put Pyongyang on notice, he quickly pivoted: “North Korea and its people need not fear the United States or their neighbors in the region who seek only to live in peace with North Korea.”