NEWS

18.01.2018 | ‘Groundless!’ Russia furiously bit back at US over North Korea sanctions breach attack
Source - Interfax

Donald Trump said in an interview on Wednesday that Russia was helping North Korea evade international sanctions and was probably helping supply Pyongyang with anything that China had stopped giving it.

The claims were backed up by US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on Wednesday the United States is getting evidence that international sanctions are "really starting to hurt" North Korea, even as he accused Russia of not implementing all of the measures.

But a Russian source told the Interfax agency the claims were “groundless”.

President Trump told Reuters in an interview earlier on Wednesday that Russia was helping North Korea evade international sanctions and that Pyongyang was getting closer every day to being able to deliver a long-range missile to the United States.

Secretary Tillerson told reporters the Russian failure to comply with the U.N. measures "primarily" concerned fuel "but some other areas potentially as well." He did not provide details.

Nevertheless, Secretary Tillerson said he was confident the pressure would eventually bring North Korea to the negotiating table over its nuclear and missile programs. Pyongyang has carried out nuclear and missiles tests in defiance of U.N. and other sanctions.

"We are getting a lot of evidence that these sanctions are really starting to hurt," Secretary Tillerson said, citing intelligence and anecdotal evidence from defectors.

He said Japan told a conference on North Korea in Vancouver on Tuesday that more than 100 North Korean fishing boats had drifted into its waters and two-thirds of those aboard them had died.

"What they learned is that they are being sent out in the winter time because there's food shortages and they are being sent out to fish with inadequate fuel to get back," he said.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in had attributed North Korea's recent willingness to talk to South Korea to the pain of sanctions, Secretary Tillerson told an event at Stanford University in California.

But he later said he suspected Russia may not only be failing to implement some sanctions but "frustrating" some of the effort to press the North.

"It's apparent to us that they're not implementing all the sanctions and there's some evidence they may be frustrating some of the sanctions," Secretary Tillerson said aboard his aircraft while returning from Vancouver.

Secretary Tillerson said that, while North Korea had a record of seeking to drive a wedge between the United States and its allies through "charm offensives," Washington was supportive of the North-South dialogue.

Secretary Tillerson said of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un: "He knows how to reach me, if he wants to talk. But he's got to tell me he wants to talk. We're not going to chase him."

He said he was confident the sides would eventually get to the negotiating table and he wanted North Korea to know that, when that happened, the United States had "very, very strong military options standing behind me."

The Trump administration has said repeatedly that all options are available, including military ones, in forcing North Korea to give up its development of nuclear missiles capable of reaching the United States, although it prefers a diplomatic solution.



| | | Add to chosen
Search
Subscribe
Центр миру, конверсії та зовнішньої політики України
Інститут євро-атлантичного співробітництва
Центр "Україна - Європейський вибір"
Defense Express
Центр європейських та трансатлантичних студій

Rambler's Top100 Rambler's Top100


Міжнародний фонд відродження Project is realized with support from The International Міжнародний фонд відродження Project is realized with support from the NATO Information © 2004 - 2024. ЄВРОАТЛАНТИКА.UA
All rights reserved

This project was funded, in part, through Grant the opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed herein are those of the Author (s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the Department of State.
На головну Анонси подій Новини Аналітика Топ новини та коментарі Мережа експертів Про проект