Should we relax?
‘We are not your enemy’: Tillerson says US seeks dialogue with Pyongyang, not regime change
©
Bobby Yip / Reuters
RT,
1
August, 2017
Washington
does not seek regime change in North Korea and at some point would
like to have a dialogue with Pyongyang to de-escalate the tensions on
the peninsula, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has said.
“We
do not seek a regime change; we do not seek the collapse of the
regime; we do not seek an accelerated reunification of the peninsula;
we do not seek an excuse to send our military north of the 38th
parallel,”Tillerson told reporters
Tuesday in Washington DC.
Despite repeated warnings from Washington that the US might resort to a military solution to curb Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programs, Tillerson stressed that the US is trying to convey to the North Koreans that “we are not your enemy... we are not your threat.”
“We
would like to sit and have a dialogue with them about the future that
will give them the security they seek and the future economic
prosperity for North Korea,” Tillerson
said.
Negotiations
with the North Korean government are possible as long as there is “an
understanding that a condition of those talks is there is no future
where North Korea holds nuclear weapons or the ability to deliver
those nuclear weapons to anyone in the region much less to the
homeland.”
While
claiming that “only
the North Koreans are to blame for this situation,” Tillerson
once again voiced Washington’s long-standing position that China
should pressure its neighbor to halt its nuclear ambitions. The
United States and China share the same objective, a denuclearized
Korean Peninsula, the US diplomat said
.
And
while Beijing has cut substantial economic ties in recent months with
its neighbor, China believes the only way to solve the North Korean
crisis is through diplomacy. However, the recent
Chinese-Russian “double
freezing” initiative
– suggesting that North Korea stops its ballistic missile and
nuclear activities while the US and its allies halt war games in the
region – has been rejected by Washington.
Tillerson’s
comments come less than a week after Pyongyang said it conducted a
second successful test of an intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM). North Korea’s KCNA news agency reported that the Hwasong-14
reached an altitude of 3,725km (2,314.6 miles) and flew 998 km (620
miles) for 47 minutes and 12 seconds before landing in waters off the
Korean Peninsula’s east coast Friday.
The
Russian military, however, said the weapon was likely an
intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM), citing data from its
missile warning system.
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