President Donald Trump fired off a warning tweet to North Korea Tuesday night, taunting leader Kim Jong Un who said in his New Year speech that Americans should be aware he has a 'button' for nuclear weapons.
Trump
warned the hermit country: 'North Korean Leader Kim Jong-Un just stated
that the ''Nuclear Button is on his desk at all times.'' Will someone
from his depleted and food starved regime please inform him that I too
have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one
than his, and my Button works!'
The
threat came after an annual speech given by Kim, in which he cautioned:
'The U.S. should know that the button for nuclear weapons is on my
table.'
Kim warned
America that it can 'never start a war against me and our country' and
insisted his nukes are now a reality, not a threat.
Despite
the ongoing war of words, Pyongyang this morning revealed it will
reopen a hotline with South Korea to discuss attending the Winter
Olympics.
The hotline, which was cut by the
North in 2016, is to be restored this morning after Seoul proposed
high-level talks in response to an olive branch from the North's leader
ahead of next month's Pyeongchang Games.
The talks would aim to establish formal dialogue about sending a North Korean delegation to the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, Ri said.
An official from South Korea's unification ministry told Reuters they were ready to speak with North Korean officials once the hotline was opened. Government officials check the hotline, a telephone line at the border, twice every day in the morning and afternoon.
South Korean presidential spokesman Yoon Young-chan said North Korea's decision to open the hotline had 'significant meaning' because it could lead to constant communication between the two Koreas.
While appearing to open the door to discussing taking part in the Winter Olympics - which would be the first direct negotiations in more than two years - Kim also sternly warned that he would push ahead with 'mass producing' nuclear warheads in defiance of U.N. sanctions.
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said North Korea might be 'trying to drive a wedge of some sort' between the United States and South Korea and added that while it was up to Seoul to decide who it talked to: 'We are very skeptical of Kim Jong-Un's sincerity in sitting down and having talks.'
Trump, who has led a global drive to pressure North Korea through sanctions to give up development of nuclear-tipped missiles capable of hitting the United States, earlier held back judgment on Pyongyang's offer to talk, saying on Twitter: 'Rocket man now wants to talk to South Korea for first time.
'Perhaps that is good news, perhaps not - we will see!'
Trump has frequently derided Kim as 'rocket man.' The U.S. president said sanctions and other pressures were starting to have a big impact on North Korea.
Kim and Trump have exchanged fiery barbs in the last year and the U.S. president has warned that the United States would have no choice but to 'totally destroy' North Korea if forced to defend itself or its allies.
North Korea regularly threatens to destroy the United States, South Korea and Japan and tested its most powerful intercontinental ballistic missile in November, which it said was capable of delivering a warhead anywhere in the United States.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5230353/Trump-threatens-blow-North-Korea-Kim-Jong-uns-warning.html#ixzz537wB3W3A
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The
dictator's overtures to the South marked a rare softening in tone, as
tensions over its banned weapons programme have surged in recent months
following a flurry of missile launches and its most powerful nuclear
test yet.
Meanwhile the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations,
Nikki Haley, warned North Korea on Tuesday against staging another
missile test and said Washington would not take any talks between North
and South Korea seriously if they did not do something to get Pyongyang
to give up its nuclear weapons.




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