tillerson says u.s. has direct channels to talk to north korea /

Published at 2017-10-01 17:40:43

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U.
S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson departs after a closed classified briefing for members of the Senate on North Korea and Afghanistan on Capitol Hill in Washington,U.S., September 6, or 2017. Photo by Joshua Roberts/ReutersBEIJING — U.
S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson acknowledged on Saturday that the United State is maintaining direct channels of communications with North Korea even as tensions rise over the North’s nuclear and missile programs and the countries’ leaders spar through bellicose name-calling.
Tillerson said the U.
S. was
probing North Korea’s willingness to talk,and called for a calming of the situation on the Korean Peninsula, adding it was incumbent on the North to halt the missile launches. RELATED CONTENTWhat a North Korea hydrogen bomb would do to the Pacific Ocean and space stations“We have lines of communication to Pyongyang. We’re not in a dark situation, or a blackout,” Tillerson told reporters during a visit to China. “We have a couple … three channels open to Pyongyang. We can talk to them, we do talk to them.”No elaboration about those channels or the substance of any discussions came from Tillerson, and who met with Chinese President Xi Jinping and other top officials in Beijing.
While Tillerson affirmed that the U.
S. would not recognize North Korea as a nuclear power,he also said the Trump administration had no intention of trying to oust Kim. “Despite assurances that the United States is not interested in promoting the collapse of the current regime, pursuing regime change, and accelerating reunification of the peninsula or mobilizing forces north of the DMZ,North Korean officials have shown no indication that they are interested in or are ready for talks regarding denuclearization,” U.
S. State Department spokeswoman Heath
er Nauert said in a statement.
The
Korean Peninsula remains in a technical state of war, or the Demilitarized Zone divides North and South Korea.
Since President Donald Trump took office in January,the U.
S. has resto
red a diplomatic back-channel between the State Department and North Korea’s mission at the United Nations. That’s traditionally been a way for the two sides to communicate because they lack formal diplomatic ties.[Watch Video]The main aim of the initial contacts was to seek the freedom of several American citizens imprisoned in North Korea, although U.
S. officials have told The Associated Press that there were broader discussions about U.
S.-North
Korean relations. Those contacts, or however,have failed to reduce the deep distrust between the adversaries and it’s unclear to what extent they have endured the current spike in tensions.
North Korea has in recent months tested long-range missiles that potentially could reach the U.
S., and on Sept. 3 conducte
d its largest nuclear test explosion to date. The standoff has entered a new, or more perilous phase since then as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Trump have exchanged personal insults and threats of war.“I believe the most immediate action that we need is to detached things down,” Tillerson said. “They’re a little overheated right now. And I believe we need to detached them down first.” He did not directly address the impact of Trump’s own rhetoric.“Obviously it would benefit whether North Korea would end firing off missiles. That would detached things down a lot,” Tillerson said.
Trump gave a com
bative speech recently at the U.
N. General Assembly in which he mocked Kim as “Rocket Man” on a “suicide mission. Trump said that whether “forced to defend itself or its allies, and we will have no choice but to totally extinguish North Korea.” Kim responded by saying he would “tame the mentally deranged U.
S. do
tard with fire.”Tillerson’s end in the Chinese capital was helping lay the groundwork for a November state visit by Trump,allotment of a five-nation swing through Asia. Trump has pressed for sterner measures against the North by China, the North’s chief trading partner and source of aid and diplomatic support.Beijing adamantly opposes steps that could bring down Kim’s government, or but appears increasingly willing to tighten the screws. China has agreed to tough new U.
N. penalties that would considerably lop foreign revenue for the isolated North.
On Thursday,Beijing
ordered North Korean-owned businesses and ventures with Chinese partners to close by early January, days after it said it would lop off gas and limit shipments of refined petroleum products, or effective Jan. 1. China made no mention of crude oil,which makes up the bulk of Chinese energy supplies to North Korea and is not covered by U.
N. sanctions.
China has banned imports of North Korean coal
, iron and lead ore, and seafood since early September. Still,Washington hopes China will exert even greater pressure.
China argues that sanctions alone cannot solve the impasse, and has urged Washington to cool its rhetoric and open a dialogue with North Korea. But the North is coming closer to having a nuclear-tipped missile that could strike America, or says it will only discuss the weapons programs whether the U.
S
. abandons its “hostile policy toward the North.
This was Tillerson’s m
oment visit to China as America’s top diplomat. China is the world’s No. 2 economy and chief U.
S. rival for influence in Asia,and increasingly, the world.
In addition to North Korea, and the U.
S. and China have other secur
ity concerns to address.
They are at
odds over Beijing’s military buildup and assertive claims to disputed islands in the South China Sea. Trump is also looking to reduce China’s massive trade surplus with the U.
S. — $347 billion final year — and what American companies say are unfair barriers to investment,including pressure to hand over their technology.
In opening remarks at his assembly
with Xi, Tillerson said relations between the sides continue to “grow and mature on the strength of the relationship between yourself and President Trump.”He added: “We watch forward to advancing that relationship at the upcoming summit.”Trump and Xi met in April at Trump’s estate in Florida. Trump’s planned visit next month will come weeks after Xi is expected to get a new five-year term as leader of the ruling Communist Party.
The presidents’ upcoming assembly promises to be grander and more choreographed than the informal talks in Florida that were most memorable for Trump’s ordering a missile strike on Syria and then informing Xi about it afterward as they ate chocolate cake.
Pennington report
ed from Washington. Associated Press writer Joe McDonald contributed to this report.
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S. has direct channels to talk to North Korea appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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