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Saturday, December 2, 2017

Trump, His Administration Are ‘Begging for Nuclear War’ North Korea Foreign Ministry Says

President Donald Trump and his administration are “begging for nuclear war,” North Korea’s Foreign Ministry said Saturday.

People watch a television news screen showing pictures of U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un at a railway station in Seoul on Nov. 29, 2017. (Credit: JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images)

People watch a television news screen showing pictures of U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un at a railway station in Seoul on Nov. 29, 2017. (Credit: JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images)

Trump is “staging an extremely dangerous nuclear gamble on the Korean peninsula,” a Foreign Ministry spokesman said in a written statement that also calls Trump a “nuclear demon” and a “disruptor of global peace.”

The comments came ahead of a joint US-South Korean military drill, scheduled to begin Monday. About 12,000 US military personnel and 230 planes are expected to participate in the drill, known as Vigilant Ace.

North Korean officials made similar comments last month. A furious commentary published in a state-run newspaper said Trump had displayed his “true colors as an old lunatic, mean trickster and human reject” during his recent visit to the Korean Peninsula.

The statement comes days after North Korea test-fired a brand new intercontinental ballistic missile, which experts said shows a major advance in technology and threat.

After the missile was tested, Trump tweeted Wednesday that “additional major sanctions will be imposed on North Korea.” The United States has been trying to get other countries, especially China, to squeeze North Korea’s economy to make Kim back down from developing his country’s nuclear weapons program.

After this week’s launch, a North Korean official told CNN Pyongyang was not interested in diplomacy with the US until it had fully demonstrated its nuclear deterrent capabilities.

Reiterating remarks made in the past, the official said one step was to conduct an above-ground nuclear detonation or “large-scale hydrogen bomb” test. The other was the “testing of a long-range ICBM,” the implication being this had been achieved with the most recent launch.



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