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U.S. Says It Will Step Up Defenses if China Fails to Act Against North Korea

F-22Raptor

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BEIJING — Secretary of State John Kerry warned on Wednesday that if China failed to do more to curb North Korea’s enhanced nuclear capacity, Washington would take steps that China has strongly opposed, including deploying defense systems to protect American allies in Asia.

“This is a threat the United States must take extremely seriously,” Mr. Kerry said of North Korea’s growing nuclear arsenal at a news conference with the Chinese foreign minister, Wang Yi. “The United States will take all necessary steps to protect our people and allies. We don’t want to heighten security tensions. But we won’t walk away from any options.”

Mr. Kerry adopted the tough tone after nearly five hours of talks with Mr. Wang that were dominated by North Korea and what the United States and China, a treaty ally of the North, should do in the aftermath of its fourth nuclear test.

The secretary was referring to the deployment of a missile defense system to South Korea that has been under discussion for some time but that the South, an American ally, has resisted because of China’s opposition.

But after the North Korean test on Jan. 6, the South’s president, Park Geun-hye, said she would consider accepting the missile system — called Thaad, for Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense — to better cope with the North’s growing nuclear and missile threats.

China agreed during the talks on Wednesday to new United Nations sanctions against the North, and negotiations on their content will proceed in the coming days, Mr. Wang said. But these new sanctions “must not provoke new tensions,” he said.

A draft of new sanctions was sent to China about 10 days ago, but by the time Mr. Kerry arrived in Beijing, China had not responded in substance, American officials said.

Suggesting that the Obama administration was evincing a little too much concern about the North Korean nuclear test, and that Washington’s attention would soon drift away, Mr. Wang said that China “will not be swayed by specific events or the temporary mood of the moment.”

Mr. Wang stuck to a basic theme, that China’s preference is the reconvening of talks on North Korea. “Sanctions are not an end in themselves,” he said.

Mr. Kerry made clear that the United States’ position was that China, North Korea’s biggest trading partner, needed to use its leverage and what he called its “connections” with the country to pressure it to give up its nuclear arsenal.

Washington would like China to curb exports of oil, including aviation fuel, that help keep the bare-bones North Korean economy afloat. It has also asked China to crack down on its banks and businesses that give the North access to foreign exchange.

A bill calling for sanctions against Chinese entities that help North Korea in its military programs, criminal activities and money laundering recently passed with strong support in the House of Representatives.

As part of his attempt to persuade Beijing, Mr. Kerry used the example of the recent Iran deal: The restrictions on Iran’s banks and financial institutions to conduct transactions abroad helped bring that country to the negotiating table over its nuclear program, a feat that Mr. Kerry led and that China supported, along with Russia.

Mr. Kerry used the news conference to publicly call on China to take similar actions against North Korea and to create another “united front.”

“With all due respect, more significant and impactful sanctions were put against Iran, which did not have nuclear weapons, than against North Korea, which does,” Mr. Kerry said.

The secretary faces a tough sell. President Xi Jinping of China made a decision last year that it was better for China to have a friendly nuclear-armed North Korea on its border than a hostile nuclear-armed North Korea, Chinese analysts have said.

“For China, the worst-case scenario is you push North Korea over to become an enemy with nuclear weapons,” said Zhang Baohui, director of the Center for Asian Pacific Studies at Lingnan University in Hong Kong. “I think China has decided to tolerate North Korea as a nuclear state.”

Mr. Xi sent a top lieutenant, Liu Yunshan, a member of the Standing Committee of the Politburo, to the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, in October to attend a military parade and to deliver a personal letter from Mr. Xi to the North’s leader, Kim Jong-un.

Nevertheless, Mr. Zhang said, China has urged North Korea to denuclearize. And the North’s detonation of a nuclear device on Jan. 6 was a way of telling Beijing that it could not dictate the country’s foreign policy, Mr. Zhang said.

Chinese officials have told their American counterparts that they were not informed of the timing of the test and that it came as a surprise.

China has accused Washington of using the North Korean nuclear tests as an excuse to deploy the missile defense system in South Korea.

“The Thaad has nothing to do with North Korea,” said Wang Junsheng, a research fellow on Northeast Asia at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. “It is simply the U.S. technically trying to deter China and Russia with these missiles and strategically alienating South Korea from China.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/28/world/asia/us-china-north-korea.html
 
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America world police. :lol: Trying to offload your job as the world policeman to a developing country like China, such a disgrace.

If a developing country can do something that the sole superpower cannot, that is some kind of joke.

America's "red lines":

No rogue state can possess nuclear weapons!

Syria cannot use chemical weapons!

China cannot build islands in the South China sea!

Russia cannot annex Crimea!
 
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I donot think the superior leader's new toy is intended for South Korea. There is no need to find an excuse, if US wants to make a few bucks by selling its missile defense system to SK.
 
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When Vietnam or Philippines were building their islands in SCS, never heard US complaining :cuckoo:

America just likes to cry constantly and run away from developing and even underdeveloped countries. What a superpower.

Their list of "red lines" reads more like a list of what they cry about every day.
 
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I donot think the superior leader's new toy is intended for South Korea. There is no need to find an excuse, if US wants to make a few bucks by selling its missile defense system to SK.
The reality is US does want the missile defense there. They are using the reluctance of China's pressure on NK as an excuse. They will have a missile defense there regardless if NK act rogue or not.
 
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The reality is US does want the missile defense there. They are using the reluctance of China's pressure on NK as an excuse. They will have a missile defense there regardless if NK act rogue or not.

Sometimes we have to break traditions and operate outside of our normal boundaries.

I believe this is the time to make this change. Perhaps it is time for China and our Russian friend to establish joint missile defence's over in North pole, Cuba, Mexico, Argentina, Venezuela and other parts of Latin America. We too need to protect our friends and business partners from this "credible nuclear threat".

Should the American missile system fail, they know we got them. :cheers:
 
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