[The White House on Monday poured more cold water on potential talks with
North Korea over its nuclear weapons program just days after U.S. Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson said Washington was in direct contact with leader
Kim Jong Un’s regime.
The move came as North Korean state media threatened Japan with “nuclear
clouds” and lambasted Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s push for maximum pressure
on the isolated nation.
“Now is not the time to talk,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said
Monday, further reinforcing President Donald Trump’s view that Tillerson
was “wasting his time trying to negotiate with Little Rocket Man,” a
mocking reference to Kim.]

A man watches a TV screen showing U.S. President Donald Trump and North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un during a news program broadcast at the main train
station in Seoul on Aug. 10. | AP

ASIA PACIFIC
White House again rules out talks as North Korea threatens Japan with
‘nuclear clouds’

BY JESSE JOHNSON
STAFF WRITER
OCT 3, 2017

The White House on Monday poured more cold water on potential talks with
North Korea over its nuclear weapons program just days after U.S. Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson said Washington was in direct contact with leader
Kim Jong Un’s regime.

The move came as North Korean state media threatened Japan with “nuclear
clouds” and lambasted Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s push for maximum pressure
on the isolated nation.

“Now is not the time to talk,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said
Monday, further reinforcing President Donald Trump’s view that Tillerson
was “wasting his time trying to negotiate with Little Rocket Man,” a
mocking reference to Kim.

Trump on Sunday had dismissed Tillerson’s earlier comments that the U.S.
was probing Pyongyang’s interest in talks, urging him to save his energy.

“We’ll do what has to be done!” Trump tweeted.

The North conducted its sixth and largest nuclear test — purportedly of a
thermonuclear, or hydrogen, bomb — on Sept. 3, and has launched dozens of
missiles this year — including two over Japan — as it moves closer to
mastering the technology needed to reliably target the United States with a
nuclear-tipped missile.

In July, it conducted two tests of an intercontinental ballistic missile
that experts say is capable of striking a large chunk of the United States.

Pyongyang maintains that its nuclear and missile programs are crucial to
the Kim regime’s survival and has ruled out denuclearization — a key
condition for the U.S. in any talks with the North — calling its atomic
arsenal a “war deterrent.”

Asked about Trump’s and Tillerson’s remarks, Sanders said that the focus of
any conversations with the North had been and will continue to be on the
three Americans detained in the reclusive country.

“The only conversations that have taken place, or that would . . . be on
bringing back Americans who have been detained,” Sanders said, according to
a transcript of her news conference. “Like with Otto (Warmbier), those were
the type of conversations that this administration was willing to have.
Beyond that, there will be no conversations with North Korea at this time.”

Warmbier, a U.S. college student, was jailed in Pyongyang in 2016 for
allegedly attempting to steal propaganda poster from his hotel while
visiting the country. He was released on medical grounds in June but
arrived home seriously ill and died days later, a fate his parents and
Trump blamed on torture, but which medical examiners could not confirm.

Sanders’ comments stood in stark contrast to Tillerson’s remarks over the
weekend in Beijing, where he told reporters: “We can talk to them, we do
talk to them directly” and that the U.S. has “a couple, three channels open
to Pyongyang.”

The Trump administration has appeared to settle into a policy of pressuring
Kim’s regime into returning to the negotiating table — on Washington’s
terms — heaping both stringent unilateral and United Nations sanctions onto
the country.

Trump has also variously threatened it with “fire and fury” and to “totally
destroy” the country of 25 million people if the United States is forced to
defend itself or its allies, including Japan. He has repeatedly said that
all options — including military action — remain on the table for reining
in its nuclear weapons ambitions. And in another tweet late last month, the
U.S. president also appeared to advocate regime change, saying that Kim and
North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho “won’t be around much longer”
after Ri hinted at a possible nuclear weapons test over the Pacific Ocean.

Still, Sanders stressed that the White House’s approach does not mean an
end to diplomacy and suggested that efforts to pressure the Kim regime will
continue.

“There’s a difference between talking and putting diplomatic pressure. We
still strongly support putting diplomatic pressure on North Korea, which
we’re continuing to do,” Sanders said.

“We’ve encouraged all of our allies and partners to do more, and we’re
going to continue to keep all options on the table when it comes to that,”
she added.

In response to the increasingly fraught security environment, Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe has forged close ties with the mercurial Trump in a bid
to bolster the U.S.-Japan alliance.

The Japanese leader has hewed closely to Washington’s calls for the North
to denuclearize, issuing a stern speech at the U.N. General Assembly and
even going so far as to write in an editorial in The New York Times last
month that pressure, not diplomacy, should be prioritized.

“Dialogue,” Abe wrote, referencing past diplomatic failures, “will not work
with North Korea.”

Late Monday, the North’s official Korean Central News Agency blasted Abe’s
stance, calling the tactic a “suicidal deed” that “will bring nuclear
clouds” to the country.

The KCNA commentary ripped into Abe’s moves, characterizing him as “running
around the U.N. stage like a headless chicken” for meetings with world
leaders on the North Korean issue and blasting the prime minister as using
the crisis to win votes ahead of an Oct. 22 Lower House election.

“Japan’s such rackets inciting the tension of the Korean Peninsula is a
suicidal deed that will bring nuclear clouds to the Japanese archipelago,”
the commentary said.

“No one knows when the touch-and-go situation will lead to a nuclear war,
but if so, the Japanese archipelago will be engulfed in flames in a moment.”


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Peace Is Doable

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