5:33
US, N Korea talks continue through 'diplomacy' – Tillerson
US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has insisted President Donald Trump
wants to resolve the confrontation with North Korea through
diplomacy.
US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Photo: RNZ / Hans Weston
16
October, 2017
It
will continue until "the first bomb drops", he told CNN.
Sanctions
and diplomacy, he said, had brought unprecedented international unity
against North Korea's nuclear weapons programme.
Last
month, Mr Trump told Mr Tillerson not to waste time seeking talks
with Kim Jong-un.
Mr
Tillerson's remarks come as the US and South Korea begin their latest
joint military exercise in waters surrounding the Korean peninsula,
involving fighter jets, destroyers and aircraft carriers.
The
drills regularly anger the North, and Pyongyang has in the past
denounced them as a "rehearsal for war".
In
Sunday's interview, Mr Tillerson again refused to comment on whether
he had referred to Mr Trump as a moron after a July meeting at the
Pentagon.
"I'm
not going to deal with that petty stuff," he replied, saying he
would not dignify the question with an answer.
The
president responded by challenging
the secretary of state to an IQ test but
a spokeswoman said later it had been a joke.
Lines of communication
In
recent months, North Korea has defied international opinion by
conducting its sixth nuclear test and launching two missiles over
Japan.
Analysts
say the secretive communist state is clearly set on developing a
nuclear-capable missile, able to threaten the continental US, despite
UN sanctions.
At
the end of last month, Mr Tillerson disclosed that the US was in
"direct contact" with the North and looking at the
possibility of talks.
After
months of heated rhetoric, it came as a surprise to some that the two
countries had lines of communication.
However,
the next day Mr Trump tweeted Mr Tillerson to say: "Save your
energy Rex, we'll do what has to be done!"
-
BBC
With his outrageous bias in favour of the Trump regime Turner is worth watching.
NORTH KOREA ANNOUNCES INTENT TO ATTACK - Missiles Reportedly "aimed" at US West Coast
15 October, 2017
Multiple
reports coming out of east Asia say North Korea has decided they have
"no choice but to use military force" and are presently
aiming long-range missiles at the west Coast of the United States.
The
Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) which is the official, state-run
mouthpiece of North Korea, said today:
"US provocations leave the DPRK with no other choice than to use military force."
Earlier
today, we reported North
Korea had deployed at least 6 missiles on
Transporter/Erector/Launcher (TEL) vehicles and moved them to
differing parts of his country.
There
is a small possibility that Kim has decided that war is inevitable.
In that case, he will probably do as Russian President Vladimir Putin
has said. Putin said that he learned in street fighting as a kid,
that "if a fight is inevitable, it's best to throw the first
punch."
This is, sadly, consistent with the spreading out at many locations, several missiles at once. If Kim is going to try anything serious, it would be best to have many decoys to make it harder to find the real payloads.
....and so we watch.
Strange
reports are also coming out claiming the North Korean missiles are
"aimed at the US West coast" as shown above.
This
seems bizarre since an Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM)
would typically be aimed straight up to achieve orbit, then release
its payload, which then steers to it's target before re-entering
earth's atmosphere.
It
is possible, however, that North Korea does not believe their
warheads would survive the heat and stress of re-entry into the
atmosphere, and are thus actually "aiming" the missiles for
a sub-orbital flight across the Pacific.
This
would be odd, but achievable.
On
Saturday, Kim Jong-un’s regime sent a chilling warning shot to
the US President telling him
“the US mainland will be reduced to ashes”
The
secretive state said President Trump’s “rude remarks” will
“accelerate the doom of the evil empire”
The
warning, pumped out by the communist state's propaganda machine, is
the latest escalation by North Korea in threats of nuclear
war against the US.
It
came after two Air Force supersonic heavy bombers flew over the
Korean peninsula in a show of force against Pyongyang on Tuesday
night.
North
Korean state media on Friday renewed a threat to launch missiles
toward the US territory of Guam, warning that “reckless moves” by
the US would compel Pyongyang to take action.
North
Korea first said it was examining a plan to target the Pacific island
in August after US President Donald Trump warned the isolated regime
would “face fire and fury like the world has never
seen” following a US intelligence assessment that North Korea
had produced a miniaturized nuclear warhead.
“We
have already warned several times that we will take counteractions
for self-defense, including a salvo of missiles into waters near the
US territory of Guam,” the KCNA report quoted Kim Kwang Hak, a
researcher at the Institute for American Studies of the North Korean
Foreign Ministry, as saying.
“The
US military action hardens our determination that the US should be
tamed with fire and lets us take our hand closer to the ‘trigger’
for taking the toughest countermeasure,” Kim added.
The
latest warnings from Pyongyang follow weeks of rising tensions, which
promise to escalate further when US and South Korea joint naval
exercises begin Monday.
Joint
military exercises are particularly infuriating to Pyongyang. The
North Korean government views them as a dress rehearsal for an
invasion — even as the US insists they are purely defensive in
nature.
The
KCNA report listed a string of perceived US provocations —
including a litany of bombastic threats from President Trump, recent
deployments of a US guided-missile submarine and aircraft carrier to
the region, and a new round of “high intensity” US and South
Korea joint naval drills.
The
article ended with a familiar warning: that the US would be solely
responsible for “pushing the situation on the peninsula to the
point of explosion.”
Alleged Pyongyang Propaganda Leaflets Found Near S Korean President's Office
Small
bills have been spotted on the streets near Cheong Wa Dae, the
official residence of the South Korean head of state, in Seoul,
Yonhap reported. They are presumed to be North Korean propaganda
leaflets. Officials said an investigation will be launched to find
out how they made their way to the area.
Cheong
Wa Dae security officials confirmed that a number of what is presumed
to be Pyongyang propaganda leaflets were recently found in the area,
with some even found in the yard of Chunchugwan, a press center on
the eastern side of the presidential residence.
The
bills carried at least three different messages condemning South
Korea and the United States for hostility towards the North.
South
Korea has decided not to skate on thin ice by using Israel's Iron
Dome system and to develop its own counter-rocket system amid
tensions on the Peninsula.
MOSCOW
(Sputnik) — South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said that
South Korean Agency for Defense Development has been working on core
technologies for such system based on a "hit-to-kill"
platform, the Yonhap news agency reported.
The
decision has been reportedly made after South Korean military decided
not to buy Israel's Iron Dome system as it would not be effective
against a massive attack using long-range rockets.
DPRK
state-run media outlet KCNA September 3, 2017, handout purporting to
show Pyongyang leader Kim Jong-un viewing newly developed
miniaturized hydrogen bomb capable of being mounted on ICBM. // KCNA
handout
Meanwhile,
the joint week-long navy drills of the US and South Korean fleets
have kicked off. About 40 vessels, including the aircraft carrier USS
Ronald Reagan, are taking part in maneuvers in the waters around the
Korean Peninsula.
The
exercises come against the backdrop of escalating pressure on the
Korean peninsula over Pyongyang's missile and nuclear tests.
Following
the ballistic missile test, conducted by Pyongyang on September 15,
the United States and North Korea exchanged threats, with the US
President Donald Trump threatening to "totally destroy"
North Korea if forced to defend the United States or its allies, and
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un warning the United States of a
highest level of hard-line countermeasures in history.
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