Trump arrives in South Korea amid heightened tensions with Pyongyang

U.S. President Donald Trump waves as first lady Melania Trump, center right, stands upon their arrival at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, Nov. 7, 2017. (Photo Courtesy: AP)

OSAN — U.S. President Donald Trump has arrived in South Korea as part of regional tour that has been dominated by North Korea’s weapons development.

During his two-day visit, Trump is expected to reaffirm America’s commitment to defend the U.S. ally against Pyongyang amid increasing tensions on the Korean peninsula.

Earlier in Japan, Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe agreed that “all options are on the table” when it comes to dealing with North Korea.

Abe, at a news conference with Trump at the Akasaka Palace in Tokyo, said Monday there is “no point in dialogue for the sake of dialogue with North Korea” and the time has come to exert maximum pressure on Pyongyang.

U.S. President Donald Trump, left, meets with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe upon the arrival at the Kasumigaseki Country Club in Kawagoe, near Tokyo, Nov. 5, 2017. (Photo Courtesy: AP)

Abe and Trump, following a second day of meetings, confirmed that North Korea has been the dominant topic of their discussions.

The U.S. president called Pyongyang’s pursuit of placing a nuclear warhead on an intercontinental ballistic missile “a threat to the civilized world and international peace and stability.”

Trump repeated that the era of strategic patience in dealing with Pyongyang is over.

“Some say my rhetoric is strong, but look what’s happened with weak rhetoric over the last 25 years,” the president said criticizing the approaches of previous U.S. administrations. But he declined to answer a Japanese reporter’s question about whether he is prepared to go to war with North Korea.

The president was also asked about what fresh message he has for Kim Jong Un; the Reuters news agency reporter noting Trump’s response to a VOA question on Air Force One on the way to Japan in which he referred to the North Korean people as industrious and warm.

Trump also said North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, whom he has belittled as “Little Rocket Man,” should send back to Japan any surviving Japanese abducted by North Korean agents over decades.

“It would be a tremendous signal,” said Trump. The “start of something very special.”

Abe revealed during the joint news conference that on Tuesday he will announce his country will freeze assets of nearly three dozen North Korean groups and individuals.

The unilateral measures follow enhanced sanctions on North Korea placed by the U.S. Treasury Department and the United Nations.

Trump, in a pair of public pronouncements in Tokyo on Monday said he expects Japan will purchase “massive amounts” of American military equipment and some of it will enable Japan to shoot North Korean missiles “out of the sky.”

A South Korean news magazine with front cover photos of U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, right, and a headline “Korean Peninsula Crisis” is displayed at the Dong-A Ilbo building in Seoul, South Korea, Sept. 11, 2017. (Photo Courtesy: AP)

​A nearly three-year war on the Korean peninsula in the early 1950s ended in a stalemate that pitted the United States, South Korea and the United Nations against North Korea, which was backed by forces from China and the Soviet Union.

No peace treaty was signed and the Korean peninsula has remained divided ever since.

North Korea makes frequent claims that the United States is seeking to reignite full-scale conflict.

State media in Pyongyang on Monday, referring to Trump, said that “no one can predict when the lunatic old man of the White House, lost to senses, will start a nuclear war” against North Korea.

North Korea says the situation strongly requires the country to bolster its nuclear deterrent and “the U.S. should not expect us to make any changes.” | via Voice of America

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