After threatening to
“totally destroy North Korea” in his first address to the General Assembly,
Trump will sit down with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and South Korean
leader Moon Jae-In to discuss the way forward.
North Korea’s nuclear
threat takes center stage at the United Nations on Thursday as United States
President Donald Trump holds talks with leaders of Japan and South Korea and
the Security Council meets to push for sanctions to be enforced against
Pyongyang.
Also on Thursday, Moon will
take the UN podium to appeal for international support in the standoff with the
North, which has carried out six nuclear tests and fired two intercontinental
ballistic missiles.
The threat from North
Korea’s nuclear and missile tests has dominated this year’s gathering of world
leaders, but divisions remain over how to confront Pyongyang.
China’s Foreign Minister
Wang Yi and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, who will also deliver their
speeches on Thursday, have called for diplomatic talks and warned that military
action would be catastrophic.
In his UN address on
Wednesday, Japan’s Abe backed the tough US stance, declaring that the time for
dialogue with North Korea was over and that pressure from sanctions must be
brought to bear.
At the Security Council, US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will push for fully implementing a new raft of
sanctions targeting North Korea’s exports and its energy supplies.
The council last week
adopted new punitive measures, slapping an export ban on textiles, ending work
permits for North Korean guest workers and capping oil shipments.
That was a significant
ratcheting-up of sanctions aimed at cutting off revenue used by Pyongyang to
develop its military programs, but their impact hinges mostly on China, North
Korea’s ally and main trading partner.
The United States called
for the special council meeting on non-proliferation that will be attended by
foreign ministers from the 15 countries including China, Russia and Japan.
– Military threats as a
tactic –
Washington and its allies
hope the tough economic sanctions will build pressure on Pyongyang to come to
the table and negotiate an end to its military programs.
The US administration has
refused to offer North Korea incentives to open negotiations and has ramped up
threats of military action to force leader Kim Jong-Un — whom Trump has dubbed
“Rocket Man” — to change course.
Commenting on Trump’s fiery
speech, French President Emmanuel Macron surmised that the “military threats
can serve a purpose from a tactical point of view” to jolt Pyongyang into
changing course.
“When you consider him and
his father, it was only when such threats were made that negotiations did
happen,” Macron told reporters.
In his UN address, Abe said
the world had already tried to reach a negotiated settlement with North Korea,
starting with the US-backed 1994 Agreed Framework that collapsed a decade
later.
“Again and again, attempts
to resolve issues through dialogue have all come to naught. In what hope of
success are we now repeating the very same failure a third time?” he said.
“What is needed,” said Abe,
“is not dialogue, but pressure.”
Opening this year’s
gathering, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warned that “fiery talk can
lead to fatal misunderstandings” that could ignite a nuclear war, and called
for a political solution.
Guterres is due to meet on
Saturday with North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-Ho on the sidelines of the
assembly to send out feelers on possible diplomatic talks.
Ri, who takes the podium on
Friday, dismissed Trump’s threats to destroy his country as “a dog’s bark” and
said they would have zero impact.

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