North Korea ‘rants’ in ‘unprecedented’ letter about Donald Trump
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North Korea has warned it
will not be intimidated by Donald Trump’s threats in an “unprecedented” letter
sent to other countries.
“If Trump thinks that
he would bring the DPRK, a nuclear power, to its knees through nuclear war
threat, it will be a big miscalculation and an expression of ignorance,” the
letter said.
“Trump threatened to
totally destroy the DPRK … it is an extreme act of threatening to totally
destroy the whole world.”
The document was
published by the Sydney Morning Herald and has been verified by Australia’s
foreign ministry.
Australia’s prime
minister dismissed it as a “rant”, while the country’s foreign minister said it
showed diplomatic pressure from the international community was working.
It comes amid rising
tensions between North Korea and the US, with Kim Jong Un’s regime carrying out
a number of ballistic missile and nuclear tests.
Mr Trump has threatened
to “totally destroy” the country if need be, describing Kim as “rocket man” on
a suicide mission.
Titled “Open Letter to
Parliaments of Different Countries”, the letter was sent from Pyongyang’s
embassy in Indonesia to Australia’s embassy in the country on 28 September.
It calls
for “countries loving independence, peace and justice” to keep “sharp vigilance
against the heinous and reckless moves” of Mr Trump, who is “trying to drive
the world into a horrible nuclear disaster”.
Australian
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the letter was sent to “a lot of other
countries”.
He told
Melbourne radio station 3AW: “It doesn’t actually say anything about Australia
so much. It’s basically a rant about how bad Donald Trump is.
“I think
that they are starting to feel the squeeze and that is because China, to its
great credit, notwithstanding the long and very close history with North Korea,
is part of the global sanctions including restricting oil exports into North
Korea.
“So the
tighter the economic sanctions are applied, the greater prospects we have of
resolving that situation without a conflict.”
Foreign
minister Julie Bishop described the missive as an “unprecedented”
communication.
She said:
“It is not the way they usually publish their global messages.
“The
collective strategy of imposing maximum diplomatic and economic pressure
through sanctions on North Korea is working. This is a response to the
pressure.”
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