Kim won’t want to ‘disappoint me’ – Trump
Credit to Author: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE| Date: Sat, 03 Aug 2019 18:51:01 +0000
SEOUL: US President Donald Trump downplayed on Friday (Saturday in Manila), North Korea’s missile tests, saying that while they might violate a United Nation (UN) resolution, Kim Jong Un would not want to “disappoint” him because he had “too much to lose.”
Underlining his intense personal support for the North Korean leader, Trump fired off three tweets brushing aside the short-range missile launches.
“There may be a United Nations violation, but Chairman Kim does not want to disappoint me with a violation of trust, there is far too much for North Korea to gain,” Trump said.
“Also, there is far too much to lose,” he continued. “I may be wrong, but I believe that [Chairman] Kim has a great and beautiful vision for his country, and only the United States, with me as President, can make that vision come true.”
Nuclear-armed North Korea is barred from ballistic missile tests under UN resolutions. Its recent short-range missile tests have been condemned by European members of the UN Security Council.
Hours later, Pyongyang said it never had, and never would, recognize the Security Council’s resolutions.
North Korea is angry at the Council “groundlessly slandering” its development of conventional weapons “while turning blind eyes to the war exercises in South Korea and shipment of cutting-edge attack weapons into it,” read a foreign ministry statement carried by state news wire Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).
US-South Korean military exercises due to start next week have angered Pyongyang, and analysts say the launches are intended to increase pressure on Washington.
North Korea has signaled that further denuclearization talks could be derailed by the refusal to scrap the annual maneuvers, describing last week’s launch as a “solemn warning to the South Korean warmongers.”
KCNA also said that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un supervised the early Friday test firing of the country’s new “large-caliber multiple launch guided rocket system” — apparently a reference to the missile launches on the same day.
Kim “expressed great satisfaction” over the results, KCNA said.
Trump, however, dismissed the missile tests, calling them on Thursday “very standard,” and suggesting via Twitter that his personal touch would persuade Kim to reverse the regime’s push for a nuclear arsenal.
“He will do the right thing because he is far too smart not to, and he does not want to disappoint his friend, President Trump!” the US President said.
Trump has invested a huge amount of political capital in his attempt to persuade Kim to end the country’s isolation and give up its nuclear weapons.
However, despite three face-to-face meetings and numerous letter exchanges, Trump has little to show for his diplomacy.
Kim and Trump agreed to resume denuclearization talks during their June encounter in the demilitarized zone that divides the peninsula, but that working-level dialogue has yet to begin.
On Friday, the North carried out its third weapons test in eight days, firing two projectiles from its east coast that flew some 220 kilometers (140 miles), reaching speeds of Mach 6.9, the South’s Joint chiefs of Staff said — unusually fast for a short-range weapon.
The flight profile was similar to a Wednesday test, and Seoul’s presidential office said the weapons were likely “a new type of short-range ballistic missile.”