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International News Title: China signaling North Korea to clean up — or else? No one needs to look for tarot cards to figure out why Donald Trump ordered the USS Carl Vinson task group to sail for the Korean peninsula hes sending a message to North Korea. That message was already received in Pyongyang, but as Bloomberg reports today, it has been picked up by our allies too, with varying degrees of public enthusiasm. South Korea and Japan have played down the significance of the move and are sending signals of their own back to Washington to tread carefully: Japan might only support a limited strike that targeted North Koreas weapon facilities, according to a person with knowledge of the Abe administrations thinking. In that scenario, the biggest risk Japan sees would be a North Korean attack on U.S. bases in the country, said the person, who asked not to be named while discussing matters of national security. This is psychological warfare, said Narushige Michishita, a former Japanese defense ministry official and professor of strategic studies at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies. When you want to scare your enemy, you have to make your own people believe that this is real. It is only natural that the U.S. is playing this game. While playing this game, the U.S. cannot tell us clearly that this is just bluffing. The Abe government in Japan is more willing to play along publicly than the transitional government in South Korea is. A spokesman for Abe told the media today, We approve of the US attitude of keeping all options on the table. Thats certainly not a dash of cold water, and not a call to return to softer messaging either. China is the real key to resolving the Korean standoff, of course, so the real question is whether China will respond to Trumps messaging with opposition or reinforcement. Both Bloomberg and Strategy Page say that, for now, China has decided to sing in harmony with the US: In other words, China was telling North Korea that stronger measures from China were now a possibility. At the same time the U.S. was making it clear that the kind of attack on Syria the U.S. recently carried out could be tried on North Korea. China agrees that it might come to that but they insist that the bombs or missiles be Chinese. Undoubtedly, the US would prefer that too and would regard that threat as long overdue. Even if GT pulled that article after a few hours, another editorial published today makes Beijings point almost as clear. If the Kim regime insists on further nuclear provocations, China will react strongly: More and more Chinese support the view that the government should enhance sanctions over Pyongyangs nuclear activities. If the North makes another provocative move this month, the Chinese society will be willing to see the UNSC adopt severe restrictive measures that have never been seen before, such as restricting oil imports to the North. Pyongyangs nuclear weapons program is intended for securing the regime, however, it is reaching a tipping point. Pyongyang hopes its gamble will work, but all signs point to the opposite direction. The US is making up its mind to stop the North from conducting further nuclear tests, it doesnt plan to co-exist with a nuclear-armed Pyongyang. China supports solution of the North Korean nuclear issue under the framework of UNSC and Six-Party Talks. If the US takes unilateral action, it will win little international support. Pyongyang can continue its tough stance, however, for its own security, it should at least halt provocative nuclear and missile activities. The editorial also explicitly warns that Trump has re-established American credibility with the strike on Syria, and that clearly a situation of no-solution will not be accepted by the new US administration. The editorial ends with a clear warning, emphasis mine: Pyongyang should avoid making mistakes at this time. If that doesnt take the cake for Kim Jong-un, perhaps this clip from Trumps interview with Fox Business News Maria Bartiromo will. Theyll know theyre in trouble when Trump asks for the dessert menu. FOX Business (@FoxBusiness) April 12, 2017 Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread |
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