China's Xi urges peaceful resolution of
North Korea tension in call with Trump
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[April 12, 2017]
By Michael Martina and Christian Shepherd
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese President Xi
Jinping called for a peaceful resolution of rising tension on the Korean
peninsula in a telephone conversation with U.S. President Donald Trump
on Wednesday, as a U.S. aircraft carrier strike group steamed towards
the region.
Trump's call with Xi, just days after they met in the United States,
came as an influential state-run Chinese newspaper warned that the
Korean peninsula was the closest it has been to a "military clash" since
North Korea's first nuclear test in 2006.
The communication between the leaders underscores the increasing sense
of urgency as tension escalates amid concern that reclusive North Korea
could soon conduct a sixth nuclear test, or more missile launches, and
Trump's threat of unilateral action to solve the problem.
Trump had ordered the USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier group to head to
the Korean peninsula in an attempt to deter North Korea's nuclear and
long-range missile ambitions, which it is developing in defiance of U.N.
resolutions and sanctions.
Trump pressed Xi to do more to curb North Korea's nuclear programme when
they held their first face-to-face meeting in Florida last week.
He said on Twitter on Tuesday that North Korea was "looking for trouble"
and the United States would "solve the problem" with or without China's
help.
In their telephone call, Xi stressed that China "is committed to the
target of denuclearization on the peninsula, safeguarding peace and
stability on the peninsula, and advocates resolving problems through
peaceful means", Chinese state broadcaster CCTV said.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang, who said Trump had initiated
the call, urged everyone to lower the tension.
"We hope that the relevant parties do not adopt irresponsible actions.
Under the current circumstances, this is very dangerous," Lu told
reporters at a regular press briefing.
China's Global Times newspaper said in an editorial North Korea should
halt any plan for nuclear and missile activities "for its own security".
While widely read in China and run by the ruling Communist Party's
official People's Daily, the Global Times does not represent government
policy.
The newspaper noted Trump's recent decision to launch 59 Tomahawk
missiles at a Syrian airfield in response to a deadly gas attack last
week.
"Not only is Washington brimming with confidence and arrogance following
the missile attacks on Syria, but Trump is also willing to be regarded
as a man who honours his promises," it said.
"The U.S. is making up its mind to stop the North from conducting
further nuclear tests. It doesn't plan to co-exist with a nuclear-armed
Pyongyang," it said.
"Pyongyang should avoid making mistakes at this time."
The Global Times said if North Korea made another provocative move,
"Chinese society" might be willing to back unprecedented sanctions,
"such as restricting oil imports".
'NOT AFRAID'
North Korean state media warned on Tuesday of a nuclear attack on the
United States at any sign of American aggression.
Officials from the North, including leader Kim Jong Un, have indicated
an intercontinental ballistic missile test or something similar could be
coming.
North Korea launched a long-range rocket carrying a satellite on April
13, 2012, marking the anniversary of the birth of North Korea's founding
president Kim Il Sung.
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People practice for the expected parade on the main Kim Il-Sung
Square in central Pyongyang, North Korea April 12, 2017.
REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
Saturday will be the 105th anniversary of his birth.
Residents thronged Pyongyang's boulevards on a sunny spring morning,
some practising for a parade to be held on the weekend, with no
visible sign of the tension.
"So long as we are with our supreme leader Marshall Kim Jong Un we
are not afraid of anything," a woman who gave her name as Ri Hyon
Sim told Reuters journalists, who were escorted by North Korean
officials.
Russia has said it is worried about the possibility of a U.S. attack
on North Korea and it would raise the issue with visiting U.S.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Russian media quoted Deputy
Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov as saying.
Earlier on Wednesday, two sources in Tokyo said Japan's navy planned
exercises with the Carl Vinson carrier group in a joint show of
force.
Japan's Maritime Self Defence Force and the U.S. Navy could conduct
helicopter landings on each other's ships, as well as communication
drills, they said.
A senior Japanese diplomat said it appeared the U.S. position was to
put maximum pressure on North Korea to reach a solution peacefully
and diplomatically.
"At least, if you consider overall things such as the fact that the
U.S. government has not put out warnings to its citizens in South
Korea, I think the risk at this point is not high," said the
diplomat, who declined to be identified.
South Korea's acting president, Hwang Kyo-ahn, has warned of
"greater provocations" by North Korea and ordered the military to
intensify monitoring.
China's Defence Ministry, in a one-line statement posted on its
website, dismissed foreign media reports about a build-up of Chinese
troops on its border with North Korea as "pure fabrication".
The North fired a liquid-fuelled Scud missile this month, the latest
in a series of tests that have displayed its ability to launch
attacks and use hard-to-detect solid-fuel rockets.
North Korea remains technically at war with the United States and
its ally South Korea after the 1950-1953 Korean conflict ended in a
truce, not a peace treaty. It regularly threatens to destroy both
countries.
(Additional reporting by Ju-min Park in SEOUL, Sue-Lin Wong and
Natalie Thomas in PYONGYANG, Nobuhiro Kubo, Tim Kelly in TOKYO, and
Philip Wen in BEIJING; Writing by Michael Perry; Editing by Paul
Tait, Robert Birsel)
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