The Mercury News

North Korea vows response to US carrier

- By Eric Talmadge Associated Press Los Angeles Times contribute­d to this report.

PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korea’s parliament convened Tuesday amid heightened tensions on the divided peninsula, with the United States and South Korea conducting their biggesteve­r military exercises and the USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier heading to the area in a show of American strength.

North Korea vowed a tough response to any military moves that might follow the U.S. decision to send the carrier and its battle group to waters off the Korean Peninsula.

“We will hold the U.S. wholly accountabl­e for the catastroph­ic consequenc­es to be entailed by its outrageous actions,” a spokesman for its Foreign Ministry was quoted as saying by the state-run Korean Central News Agency.

The statement followed an assertion by U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson that U.S. missile strikes against a Syrian air base in retaliatio­n for a chemical weapons attack carry a message for any nation operating outside of internatio­nal norms. He didn’t specify North Korea, but the context was clear enough.

“If you violate internatio­nal agreements, if you fail to live up to commitment­s, if you become a threat to others, at some point a response is likely to be undertaken,” Tillerson told ABC’s “This Week.”

President Donald Trump weighed in on Tuesday, writing on Twitter that the country “is looking for trouble” and encouragin­g North Korea’s neighbor China to “solve the problem.”

Trump signed the message: “U.S.A.”

In a second message, Trump said he told China’s President Xi Jinping during his visit to Florida last week that China would get a better trade deal with the U.S. if Xi helped reign in North Korea’s missile program, apparently linking China’s cooperatio­n on security issues with its economic actions.

Tensions with North Korea have ratcheted up following a series of American and South Korean military exercises in the region and a U.S. decision to divert an aircraft carrier and other warships from a planned visit to Australia and toward the Korean peninsula in recent days.

Trump appeared to be responding to a statement from a North Korean spokesman threatenin­g “catastroph­ic consequenc­es” for the U.S. maneuvers, adding that the isolated country is “ready” for “any mode” of war.

Pyongyang is always extremely sensitive to the annual U.S.-South Korea war games, which it sees as an invasion rehearsal, and justifies its nuclear weapons as defensive in nature.

“This goes to prove that the U.S. reckless moves for invading the DPRK have reached a serious phase of its scenario,” the North’s statement said, referring to the country by its formal name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

In Washington, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump has been very clear that it’s “not tolerable” for North Korea to have nucleararm­ed missiles.

“The last thing we want to see is a nuclear North Korea that threatens the coast of the United States, or, for that matter, any other country, or any other set of human beings,” Spicer said at the Tuesday news briefing.

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