US President Donald Trump was due to land in Hanoi on Saturday, as
North Korea slammed his “warmonger” Asia tour, saying it will only
accelerate Pyongyang’s push for a full-fledged nuclear deterrent.
Trump has repeatedly railed against the North as he urges the region
to take a united front against the threat posed by the isolated nation,
which has sparked global alarm with nuclear and missile tests in recent
months.
On Friday he warned world leaders gathered in the Vietnamese resort
city of Danang that the Asia-Pacific region “must not be held hostage to
a dictator’s twisted fantasies”.
Pyongyang issued its retort Saturday branding Trump’s Asia tour a
“warmonger’s visit for confrontation to rid the DPRK of its
self-defensive nuclear deterrence”, in the first comments on the visit
by a North Korean official.
Tensions over the North’s weapons programme have surged in recent
months, as Pyongyang carried out a sixth nuclear test — by far its
largest to date — and test-fired dozens of missiles, some capable of
reaching the US mainland.
North Korea has dominated Trump’s trip, which has so far swept in Japan, South Korea, China and Vietnam.
In a speech to the South Korean parliament on Wednesday, Trump warned
Pyongyang not to underestimate the United States, while offering leader
Kim Jong-Un a better future if he gives up his nuclear ambitions.
The North on Saturday said Trump’s warnings “can never frighten us or
put a stop to our advance”, according to the state-run KCNA news
agency, quoting a Pyongyang foreign ministry spokesman.
Instead the threat “pushes us to speed up the efforts to accomplish
the great cause of completing the state nuclear force”, the statement
said, dismissing Trump’s tour of the region as a “business trip”.
– ‘America First’ –
Rewriting America’s trade relations with the Asia-Pacific region has
been Trump’s other core message, giving ample airing to his “America
First” mantra.
The combative billionaire turned president accused the region of
taking advantage of US largesse in rules-based trade deals while
retooling their own economies with “unfair” subsidies and protected
markets.
He is set to land in Vietnam’s capital Hanoi on Saturday where he
will meet its Communist leadership, following his meetings with global
leaders at the APEC summit in Danang.
Vietnam has eagerly courted trade and investment with the US since
Trump’s election, more so after he yanked the US from a key Pacific Rim
trade pact, taking with him low tariff access to the world’s largest
market.
The former wartime foes became friends under Trump’s predecessor
Barack Obama, who embraced Vietnam as part of his strategic pivot to
Asia, which sought to counterbalance China’s rise.
But Obama also delivered harsh warnings on the one-party state’s dismal rights record.
Those are likely to be muted as Trump seeks to use the US’ enormous economic heft to build bilateral trade deals.
He has already binned US participation the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
the cornerstone of Obama’s Asia embrace which Trump pulled out of in
January.
Vietnam stood to gain enormously from the deal before the US pullout,
opening the door to America’s huge market for its cheaply manufactured
goods.
Though Trump is not as revered in Vietnam as his predecessor, a Pew
survey last week found 58 percent of Vietnamese respondents have
confidence in him.
Trump will attend a state banquet on Saturday before a welcoming and deal-signing ceremony on Sunday morning.
He leaves for the Philippines on Sunday afternoon where he will attend the ASEAN summit of Southeast Asian leaders.
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Saturday, 11 November 2017
Trump, a warmonger – North Korea
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