Trump declares North Korea state sponsor of terror

The isolated pariah state joins Iran and Syria on a list of countries that are deemed to have repeatedly provided support for terrorism

US President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with his Cabinet at the White House in Washington, US, November 20, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
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President Donald Trump declared North Korea a state sponsor of terrorism on Monday even as his top diplomat said Washington has not given up hope of a negotiated end to its nuclear standoff with Kim Jong-Un's regime.

Mr Trump promised a rapid ramp-up of US Treasury sanctions against the isolated pariah state, after adding its name to a terror blacklist previously led by Iran and Syria.

"Should have happened a long time ago. Should have happened years ago," Mr Trump declared, citing the death of a US student who had been held in a North Korean jail and the assassination by nerve agent of Mr Kim's elder brother on foreign soil as reasons for the move.

But, speaking to reporters after the cabinet meeting, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Washington has not given up hope that sanctions and diplomacy can pressure Mr Kim into agreeing to sit down and discuss his nuclear disarmament.

Mr Tillerson said that punitive measures were already having a "significant effect" on Pyongyang's economy - even if China has yet to cut off oil supplies to its sole refinery - and said: "We still hope for diplomacy."

Both Mr Trump and Mr Kim have previously raised fears of open conflict erupting over the North's banned nuclear missile program, with both insulting and threatening the other with a devastating military response.

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But US officials have also been clear that their main hope is that what Mr Tillerson described as an inexorable increase in economic and diplomatic pressure - backed by China - will force Pyongyang to back down.

"We know that there are current shortages of fuel based upon what we can gather anecdotally and also from certain intelligence sources," Mr Tillerson said.

"We know that their revenues are down," he said. "So I think it is having an effect. Is this the reason we haven't had a provocative act in 60 days?"

North Korea is already under a crushing package of United States and United Nations sanctions, and Monday's terror designation will not have much immediate economic impact.

But Mr Trump said his declaration would kick off a two-week period of announcements - starting on Tuesday with a "very large" US Treasury sanctions measure - that would eventually amount to a "maximum pressure campaign."

And US officials see the designation - which was removed by then-president George W. Bush in 2008 - as a way of ratcheting up pressure on other states and foreign banks that may be failing to fully enforce the sanctions already in place.

"In addition to threatening the world by nuclear devastation, North Korea repeatedly supported acts of international terrorism including assassinations on foreign soil," Mr Trump said.

The White House has declared it will not tolerate Mr Kim's regime testing or deploying an intercontinental ballistic missile capable of carrying a nuclear warhead to US cities.

Experts believe Pyongyang is within months of such a threshold, having carried out six nuclear tests since 2006 and test-fired several types of missiles, including multi-stage rockets.

Mr Kim's government insists that, in spite of international sanctions to develop a capability it believes is essential to defending itself from the threat of US and South Korean invasion.

Washington is also pressuring the North's key trade partner and traditional ally China to turn up the sanctions pressure and force Mr Kim to come to the table to discuss his disarmament.

Japan said it "welcomes and supports" the US move to relist Pyongyang as a state sponsor of terrorism, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters Tuesday.

US officials would not say what new sanctions might be announced, but an expert predicted secondary measures against Chinese banks, and an Asian diplomat said there could be action against individual North Korean traders working in China.

The diplomat said that Washington would like to impose a total oil embargo on the North but China is not yet ready to accept a move that could cause Mr Kim's regime to topple, thereby unleashing chaos on its border.

Mr Tillerson said Washington's message to China was: "You control the pipeline that feeds their refinery. You know, you can do that unilaterally if you want to increase that pressure."