With US officials and their allies scrambling to find ways to contain an increasingly belligerent Pyongyang, the US president will address the UN General Assembly on Tuesday and then confer Thursday with his Japanese and South Korean counterparts on the sidelines of the meeting.
Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-In spoke by phone Saturday night and pledged "stronger pressure" on Kim Jong-Un's regime, the South's presidential office said, adding that the North must be made to realize that "further provocation" would put it on a "path of collapse."
Washington's ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, kept up the rhetorical pressure ahead of the upcoming meetings in New York, asserting that if the North should pose a serious threat to the US or its allies, "North Korea will be destroyed."
Trump's earlier warning he would rain "fire and fury" on a recalcitrant North Korea, she said, was "not an empty threat."
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As the US and its allies emphasize the diplomatic track, South Korea is also deploying a state-of-the-art US missile defense system. In their latest call, the White House said Trump and Moon had committed to "take steps to strengthen deterrence and defense capabilities" of South Korea, offering no details of how it might do so.
So far, every effort to persuade the North to back away from its fast-developing nuclear and missile programs -- including its most powerful nuclear test yet, on September 3 -- has proved futile, at times even seeming to prompt new acts of defiance from Pyongyang.
The North's latest show of resistance came when it launched a long-range missile over Japan on Friday, just four days after the UN Security Council had passed a tough new package of sanctions.
Haley said sanctions had already provided a "punch in the gut" to Pyongyang but that strict enforcement was crucial.
Separately, Trump's national security advisor, H.R. McMaster, agreed that "the critical thing is going to be to get all countries, every one, to do all they can to enforce those sanctions, to do everything they can, short of a military conflict, to resolve this problem."
Pyongyang, an insular country with few outside contacts, says it needs nuclear weapons to protect itself from "hostile" US forces and is determined to build the capacity to deliver a nuclear warhead that could hit the US mainland.
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