Close X
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau: No Comment On North Korea Threats, Let's Pursue A Diplomatic Solution

The Canadian Press, 22 Sep, 2017 12:50 PM
    UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Justin Trudeau avoided being drawn into the tit-for-tat threats between the leaders of the U.S. and North Korea, pointing instead to signs that diplomacy might prevail in a nuclear standoff that has the countries trading insults.
     
    Canada's prime minister said he spoke this week with the South Korean president about possible solutions to the standoff, notably by working with China. There were indeed signs Thursday of a bolstered Chinese role, via economic measures.
     
    What Trudeau wouldn't do was comment on the threats — Kim Jong Un called U.S. President Donald Trump "deranged" on Thursday, and said he would "pay dearly" for talking about "totally destroy(ing)" the country, in a speech where Trump also dubbed the North Korean leader, "Rocket Man."
     
    "As always I will pay close attention to what our American friends and neighbours have to say. ... But it's not my job to opine," Trudeau said when asked by journalists about the earlier Trump comments.
     
    "It is my job to ensure that we maintain a good relationship with the United States — particularly as we renegotiate NAFTA. And also that Canada stays focused on de-escalating the situation ... through diplomatic means."
     
    There were signs of that non-military force being ramped up Thursday.
     
    Trump escalated pressure with an executive order that punishes companies that do business with North Korea, forcing them to choose whether they want to do commerce with the superpower U.S. or the so-called Hermit Kingdom.
     
     
    He also relayed some apparently big news: "I'm very proud to tell you that ... China, their central bank, has told their other banks — that's a massive banking system — to immediately stop doing business with North Korea. This just happened," Trump said, citing reports.
     
    The young North Korean leader offered a bitter late-day riposte.
     
    Kim insulted the U.S. president as deranged, unfit for high office, he warned Trump would pay dearly for his threats, and he called Trump "a rogue and a gangster fond of playing with fire.''
     
    Kim said he is, "thinking hard'' about his response, in a statement carried by the state news agency
     
    Trudeau was asked whether he thinks this is empty insult-flinging between two perennial adversary nations — or a true emerging security crisis, with the risk of devastating consequences.
     
    "I think the situation in North Korea is extremely serious," Trudeau replied. 
     
    "The North Korean regime represents a threat to not just regional security, but global peace," he said. "The reckless behaviour, pronouncements and the development of nuclear weapons by North Korea represents something that all countries in the world should be seized with and concerned about."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Abbotsford Double Shooting Ends In Car Crash: Two Men Arrive At Hospital With Gunshot Wounds

    Abbotsford Double Shooting Ends In Car Crash: Two Men Arrive At Hospital With Gunshot Wounds
    Two men later arrived at hospital with gunshot wounds after being helped by a Good Samaritan.

    Abbotsford Double Shooting Ends In Car Crash: Two Men Arrive At Hospital With Gunshot Wounds

    Vancouver Police Strategy Targets Mental Health, Drug Crisis, High-Tech Tools

    Vancouver Police Strategy Targets Mental Health, Drug Crisis, High-Tech Tools
    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Police Department has unveiled a five-year strategic plan aimed at improving public safety and stamping out crime across the city.

    Vancouver Police Strategy Targets Mental Health, Drug Crisis, High-Tech Tools

    Internet Charmed By Small Band Of Women Who Marched In Tiny N.S. Village

    Internet Charmed By Small Band Of Women Who Marched In Tiny N.S. Village
    When Gwen Wilson and Melissa Merritt decided at the last minute to organize their own women's march on Saturday, they were prepared to be the only ones trudging down the only road in their rural Nova Scotia village.

    Internet Charmed By Small Band Of Women Who Marched In Tiny N.S. Village

    Bald Eagle Escapes After Hole Cut In Enclosure At Ontario Zoo

    Bald Eagle Escapes After Hole Cut In Enclosure At Ontario Zoo
    THUNDER BAY, Ont. — An Ontario zoo says someone broke in and cut a large hole in a fence that allowed a bald eagle to escape.

    Bald Eagle Escapes After Hole Cut In Enclosure At Ontario Zoo

    Ontario Man With Sword Threatens To Behead Woman Who Offered Him Coffee: Police

    Ontario Man With Sword Threatens To Behead Woman Who Offered Him Coffee: Police
    A 49-year-old man is facing charges after allegedly waving a sword and threatening to behead a woman who offered him coffee.

    Ontario Man With Sword Threatens To Behead Woman Who Offered Him Coffee: Police

    New Brunswick University Says It Knows Who Carved Swastika On Snow-Covered Field

    New Brunswick University Says It Knows Who Carved Swastika On Snow-Covered Field
    Photos of a swastika carved in the snow at Alumni Field at the Sackville, N.B., university were captured on social media over the weekend.

    New Brunswick University Says It Knows Who Carved Swastika On Snow-Covered Field