Top US military officer warns N Korea that US military ready
14
August, 2017
SEOUL,
Korea, Republic Of — The top U.S. military officer said Monday that
the United States wants to peacefully resolve a deepening standoff
with North Korea but is also ready to use the “full range” of its
military capabilities in case of provocation.
The
comments by Marine Corps Gen. Joseph Dunford in a series of meetings
with senior South Korean military and political officials and the
local media appeared to be an attempt to ease anxiety over
tit-for-tat threats between President Donald Trump and North Korea
while also showing a willingness to back up Trump’s warnings if
need be.
Dunford,
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is visiting South Korea,
Japan and China after a week in which Trump declared the U.S.
military “locked and loaded” and said he was ready to unleash
“fire and fury” if North Korea continued to threaten the United
States.
North
Korea, meanwhile, has threatened to lob four intermediate-range
missiles into the waters near Guam, a tiny U.S. territory about 3,200
kilometres (2,000 miles) from Pyongyang, North Korea’s capital.
This would be a deeply provocative act from the U.S. perspective, and
there has been widespread debate about whether Washington would try
to shoot the missiles down if they’re fired.
The
U.S.-North Korea impasse, which has simmered since the end of the
Korean War in 1953, has grown more tense in recent months over
worries that the North’s nuclear weapons program is nearing the
ability to target the U.S. mainland. Pyongyang tested two
intercontinental ballistic missiles last month.
“We
are seeking a peaceful resolution to the crisis,” Dunford, who also
met with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, said to reporters,
according to a local pool report.
He
earlier told his South Korean counterparts that America is ready “to
use the full range of military capabilities to defend our allies and
the U.S. homeland,” according to U.S. military spokesman Capt.
Darryn James.
Moon
separately called Monday for a peaceful solution to the nuclear
standoff, saying that “there must not be another war on the Korean
Peninsula,” according to his office.
In
a meeting with top aides at the presidential Blue House, Moon said
South Korea would work to safeguard peace on the peninsula in
co-operation with the United States and other countries. Moon said
North Korea must stop issuing menacing statements and provoking.
North
Korea, which is angry over new United Nations sanctions condemning
its rapidly developing nuclear and missile program, continued its
tough stance on Monday.
The
North accused the United States of mobilizing a huge number of
weapons and troops for annual military drills with South Korea that
begin later this month. Pyongyang, which claims the drills are war
preparation, says it will be ready to send its Guam missile launch
plan to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for approval just before or
as the drills begin.
“What
matters is that if a second conflict (on the peninsula) erupts, that
cannot help but lead to a nuclear war,” the North’s official
Korean Central News Agency said in a commentary. “We are closely
monitoring every move by the United States.”
The
commentary said that about 3.5 million young students and workers
have volunteered to join or rejoin the army because of a possible
confrontation with the United States.
Dunford
earlier told reporters travelling with him to Asia that he aims to
“sense what the temperature is in the region.” He also will
discuss military options in the event the “diplomatic and economic
pressurization campaign” fails.
“We’re
all looking to get out of this situation without a war,” Dunford
said.
Chinese
President Xi Jinping talked on the phone Saturday with Trump and
called for cool-headedness. Xi urged Washington and Pyongyang to
avoid words or actions that could worsen the situation.
Trump
has pushed China, North Korea’s biggest economic partner and source
of aid, to do more to stop the North’s nuclear ambitions. Beijing
says its influence on Pyongyang is limited.
Trump’s
recent threats followed a report that U.S. intelligence indicates
North Korea can now put a nuclear warhead on its long-range missiles.
For
all his bluster, Trump’s words did not appear to be backed by
significant military mobilization on either side of the Pacific, and
an important, quiet diplomatic channel remained open.
On
Sunday, CIA Director Mike Pompeo and Army Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster,
Trump’s national security adviser, tried to provide assurances that
a conflict is avoidable, while also supporting Trump’s tough talk.
They said the United States and its allies no longer can afford to
stand by as North Korea pushes ahead with the development of a
nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile.
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