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US says it's not pushing for regime change in NKorea

Published:Monday | September 25, 2017 | 12:00 AM
North Korea's Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho speaks outside the U.N. Plaza Hotel, in New York, yesterday.

WASHINGTON (AP):

The Trump administration clarified yesterday that it was not seeking to overthrow North Korea's government after the president tweeted that Kim Jong-Un "won't be around much longer" and Pyongyang interpreted it as a declaration of war.

Ratcheting up the rhetoric further, the North's top diplomat also argued yesterday that Trump's comment gives it the right to shoot down US warplanes in international airspace.

Trump's Saturday tweet said: "Just heard Foreign Minister of North Korea speak at UN. If he echoes thoughts of Little Rocket Man, they won't be around much longer!" Trump also used 'rocket man' for Kim in his speech to the UN General Assembly last week.

While the comments may be read as an implicit threat to eliminate Kim, a senior administration official said Washington hadn't changed its policy. American efforts in North Korea aren't aimed at regime change, said the official, who wasn't authorised to comment publicly on the issue and requested anonymity.

Cabinet officials, particularly Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, have insisted the US-led campaign to put diplomatic and economic pressure on North Korea is focused on eliminating the pariah state's nuclear weapons programme, not its totalitarian government.

But the more Trump muddies the picture, the tougher it may become to maintain cooperation with China and Russia, which seek a diplomatic solution to the nuclear crisis and not a new US ally suddenly popping up on their borders. It also risks snuffing out hopes of persuading Kim's government to enter a negotiation when its survival isn't assured.

Military manoeuvres are adding to tensions along the two Koreas' heavily militarised border. In a show of might to North Korea, US bombers and fighter escorts flew Saturday to the farthest point north of the border between North and South Korea by any such American aircraft this century.