Exclusive: Trump administration weighing
broad sanctions on North Korea - U.S. official
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[March 21, 2017]
By Matt Spetalnick and David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is considering sweeping sanctions aimed at cutting North
Korea off from the global financial system as part of a broad review of
measures to counter Pyongyang's nuclear and missile threat, a senior
U.S. official said on Monday.
The sanctions would be part of a multi-pronged approach of increased
economic and diplomatic pressure – especially on Chinese banks and firms
that do the most business with North Korea – plus beefed-up defenses by
the United States and its South Korean and Japanese allies, according to
the administration official familiar with the deliberations.
While the long-standing option of pre-emptive military strikes against
North Korea is not off the table – as reflected by U.S. Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson's warning to Pyongyang during his Asia tour last
week - the new administration is giving priority for now to less-risky
options.
The policy recommendations being assembled by President Donald Trump's
national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, are expected to reach the
president's desk within weeks, possibly before a summit with Chinese
President Xi Jinping in early April, the official said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. North Korea is expected to top the agenda at
that meeting.
It is not clear how quickly Trump will decide on a course of action,
which could be delayed by the slow pace at which the administration is
filling key national security jobs.
The White House declined comment.
Trump met McMaster on Saturday to discuss North Korea and said afterward
that the country's leader, Kim Jong Un, was "acting very, very badly."
The president spoke hours after North Korea boasted of a successful
rocket-engine test, which officials and experts think is part of a
program aimed at building an intercontinental ballistic missile capable
of hitting the United States.
'SECONDARY SANCTIONS'
The administration source said U.S. officials, including Tillerson, had
privately warned China about broader "secondary sanctions" that would
target banks and other companies that do business with North Korea, most
of which are Chinese.
The move under consideration would mark an escalation of Trump's
pressure on China to do more to contain North Korea. It was not clear
how Chinese officials responded to those warnings but Beijing has made
clear its strong opposition to such moves.
In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the
situation on the Korean peninsula was at a crossroads and there were two
prospects.
One, she said, was that the relevant parties could continue to "escalate
toward conflict and potential war".
"The other choice is that all sides can cool down and jointly pull the
Korean nuclear issue back to a path of political and diplomatic
resolution," Hua told a daily news briefing on Tuesday.
China would strictly and comprehensively implement its duties under the
U.N. Security Council resolutions, which meant implementing sanctions
but also making efforts to get back to talks, she added.
The objective of the U.S. move being considered would be to tighten the
screws in the same way that the widening of sanctions - to encompass
foreign firms dealing with Iran - was used to pressure Tehran to open
negotiations with the West on its suspected nuclear weapons program.
That effort ultimately led to a 2015 deal to restrict Iran's nuclear
program in return for sanctions relief.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watched the ground jet test of a
Korean-style high-thrust engine newly developed by the Academy of
the National Defence Science in this undated picture provided by
KCNA in Pyongyang on March 19, 2017. KCNA/via Reuters/File Photo
For such measures to have any chance to influence the behavior of
North Korea, which is already under heavy sanctions, Washington must
secure full international cooperation - especially from China, which
has shown little appetite for putting such a squeeze on its
neighbor.
Analysts also have questioned whether such sanctions would be as
effective on North Korea as they were on a major oil producer such
as Iran, given the isolated nation's limited links to the world
financial system.
North Korea has relied heavily on illicit trade done via small
Chinese banks. So, to be applied successfully, the new measures
would have to threaten to bar those banks from the international
financial system.
Also under consideration are expanded efforts to seize assets of Kim
and his family outside North Korea, the official said.
MILITARY OPTIONS
The military dimension of the review includes a strengthened U.S.
presence in the region and deployment of advanced missile defenses,
initially in South Korea and possibly in Japan. The U.S. military
has begun to install a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or
THAAD, system in South Korea, despite Chinese opposition.
Washington is increasingly concerned, however, that the winner of
South Korea's May 9 presidential election might backtrack on the
deployment and be less supportive of tougher sanctions.
Tillerson warned on Friday that Washington had not ruled out
military action if the threat from North Korea becomes unacceptable.
For now, U.S. officials consider pre-emptive strikes too risky,
given the danger of igniting a regional war and causing massive
casualties in Japan and South Korea and among tens of thousands of
U.S. troops based in both allied countries.
Another U.S. government source said Trump could also opt to escalate
cyber attacks and other covert action aimed at undermining North
Korea's leadership.
"These options are not done as stand-alones," the first U.S.
official said. "It's going to be some form of 'all of the above,'
probably excluding military action."
Trump is known to have little patience for foreign policy details,
but officials say he seems to have heeded a warning from his
predecessor, Barack Obama, that North Korea would be the most urgent
international issue he would face.
In his North Korea briefings, Trump has asked repeatedly how many
nuclear warheads and missiles Pyongyang has, at the same time as
demanding to know how much South Korea and Japan are paying for
their own defense, one U.S. official said.
(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick and David Brunnstrom; Additional
reporting by John Walcott, and Michael Martina in Beijing; Editing
by Kieran Murray, Peter Cooney and Nick Macfie)
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