WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Thursday warned China that “warrior nation” Japan could take matters into its own hands if the threat posed by North Korea is not addressed, reports AFP.
Trump’s remarks come ahead of his first visit to Asia since taking office, with soaring tensions over North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs expected to take center stage.
“Japan is a warrior nation, and I tell China and I tell everyone else that listens, I mean, you’re gonna have yourself a big problem with Japan pretty soon if you allow this to continue with North Korea,” Trump said on Fox News.
However, Trump also said that President Xi Jinping has been “pretty terrific” on North Korea, and that “China is helping us.”
After a chiding from Trump for failing to rein in Kim, China has implemented tougher UN sanctions against North Korea, and Xi’s relationship with the US leader appears to be warming.
North Korea in July launched two intercontinental ballistic missiles apparently capable of reaching the US mainland—described by its leader Kim Jong-Un as a gift to “American bastards”.
The North followed that up with two missiles that passed over Japan, and its sixth nuclear test, by far its most powerful yet.
The US president raised the specter of Japan taking action over North Korea as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe continues efforts to change its US-imposed pacifist constitution, seen by conservatives as an outdated legacy of wartime defeat, so Japan can formally transform its well-equipped and well-trained Self Defense Forces into a full-fledged military.
Trump has warned of “fire and fury” in response to Pyongyang’s threats, and derisively dubbed Kim “Rocket Man”, who responded by calling him a “dotard”.
Another AFP report adds: US bombers overflew the Korean peninsula Thursday as part of an exercise with Japanese and South Korean warplanes, the US Air Force said, days before President Donald Trump arrives in the region for a trip set to be dominated by the nuclear-armed North.
Tensions are high over Pyongyang’s ballistic missile and atomic programmes, which in recent months have seen it test ICBMs and carry out its sixth nuclear blast.
Trump’s visit will throw a spotlight on the issue, after the US President and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un traded insults and threats of war.
Flights by supersonic B-1B Lancer bombers in the area always infuriate North Korea, which condemned the drill as “blackmail” early Friday.
Two B-1B aircraft took off from Andersen Air Force Base in Guam, and were joined west of Japan by Japan Air Self-Defense Force fighters, the US Pacific Air Force said in a statement.
“The Lancers then transited overland to Korea to integrate with Republic of Korea fighters in the Yellow Sea,” the statement read, adding that the aircraft later returned “to their respective home stations.”
The exercise was part of the “continuous bomber presence” mission in the Pacific and “was not in response to any current event,” the statement said.
The operation follows an October 10 “show of force” in which two Lancers staged the first night-time joint aviation exercises with Japan and South Korea.
North Korea in July launched two intercontinental ballistic missiles apparently capable of reaching the US mainland—described by Kim as a gift to “American bastards”.
It followed up with two missiles that passed over Japan, and its sixth nuclear test, by far its most powerful yet.