By Julian Borger and Benjamin Haas
US President Trump speaks
during an interview in the Oval Office at
the White House in
Carlos Barria/Reuters
|
Donald
Trump has said that a “major conflict” was possible with North Korea though he would prefer to solve the standoff
over the country’s nuclear and missile programmes through diplomacy.
Trump’s
warning on Thursday came towards the end of a week where the administration has
made a concerted effort to restrain Pyongyang from carrying out major new weapons tests.
At
the same time, US officials sought to clarify US policy after a variety of mixed signals in
the administration’s first 100 days.
Rex
Tillerson, the secretary of state, said that the US would be prepared to enter into direct talks
with the regime of Kim Jong-un, but that it would have to prepare to negotiate
getting rid of all its nuclear weapons.
The
opening to diplomacy came as the head of the US Pacific Command, Admiral Harry
Harris told the Senate that the standoff with North Korea was the worst he had seen. It was an
assessment echoed by the president.
“There
is a chance that we could end up having a major, major conflict with North Korea . Absolutely,” Trump told Reuters.
“We’d
love to solve things diplomatically but it’s very difficult,” the president
added.
Trump
suggested there had been a breakthrough in Chinese readiness to help apply
pressure on Kim since Xi Jinping visited the US president in Florida earlier this month.
“I
believe he [the Chinese president] is trying very hard. He certainly doesn’t
want to see turmoil and death. He doesn’t want to see it. He is a good man. He
is a very good man and I got to know him very well,” Trump said.
“With
that being said, he loves China and he loves the people of China . I know he would like to be able to do
something, perhaps it’s possible that he can’t.”
Tillerson
had earlier said the Chinese had warned Pyongyang , an increasingly unruly client in recent
years, that it would impose punitive measures if North Korea carried out provocative tests.
“We
know that China is in communications with the regime in Pyongyang ,” he told Fox News. “They confirmed to us
that they had requested the regime conduct no further nuclear test.”
According
to Tillerson, the Chinese told the regime “that if they did conduct further
nuclear tests, China would be taking sanctions actions on their
own”.
The
US secretary of state said that the North
Korean regime viewed its nuclear weapons and missile programmes as a guarantee
of survival, and that the Trump administration sought to change that mindset.
“We
want to change that calculus of theirs and we have said to them: your pathway
to survival and security is to eliminate your nuclear weapons and we and other
countries will help you on the way to economic development,” Tillerson said. He
assured Pyongyang that the US objective was ridding the Korean peninsula
of nuclear weapons, not toppling Kim Jong-un.
“We do not seek a regime change in North Korea . We are not seeking the collapse of the
regime.”
Tillerson
said that the US administration would “wait as long as it
takes” for talks to start providing North Korea conducted no new nuclear or intercontinental
ballistic missile tests.
The
secretary of state did not directly reply to a question on whether this policy
was very similar to the “strategic patience” pursued by the Obama
administration, which Tillerson had earlier said had come to an end.
In
his Oval Office interview with Reuters, Trump offered an assessment of Kim.
Asked
if he considered the North Korean leader to be rational he noted that Kim had
taken over his country at an early age.
“He’s
27 years old. His father dies, took over a regime. So say what you want but
that is not easy, especially at that age,” he said.
“I’m
not giving him credit or not giving him credit, I’m just saying that’s a very
hard thing to do. As to whether or not he’s rational, I have no opinion on it. I
hope he’s rational,” he said.
Meanwhile,
in a sign that North Korea ’s regional neighbours are taking the threat
of a conflict seriously, Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull warned that
Pyongyang could launch a nuclear attack on nations and
claimed China has not applied enough pressure on the
regime.
“There
is the possibility and the risk that North Korea could launch an attack on its neighbours,”
Turnbull said on 3AW radio.
“That
is the reason why there is so much effort being put into seeking to stop this
reckless and dangerous conduct by the North Korean regime. They are a real
threat to the peace and stability in the region and to the whole world.”
Turnbull
said while North
Korea
was often a subject of satire, the country had nuclear weapons and regularly
threatened to use them.
“Their
threats can appear sometimes to be theatrical and over the top and they have
been the subject of satire but I can assure you that my government takes ... the
threat of North
Korea
very seriously,” he said.
On
Friday morning Tillerson will chair a special ministerial session of the UN
security council on North Korea , aimed at convincing other members to impose
existing sanctions on Pyongyang more rigorously.
In
Washington , the head of the Arms Control Association, Daryl
Kimball, welcomed the Trump administration’s readiness for direct talks with North Korea .
“There
are some new things here. They are making clear that regime change is not the
goal. There is a recognition that North Korea has security concerns,” Kimball said. “I
think what we hearing the evening is more of the engagement part of the maximum
pressure engagement policy that they are slowly rolling out.”
He
added: “It’s going to require persistence and patience.”