
Tokyo: US Vice President Mike Pence said
today Washington would soon unveil its "toughest sanctions
ever" on North Korea, adding that the regime in Pyongyang
would not be allowed to "hijack" the upcoming Olympics.
Speaking in Japan before attending the opening ceremony
of the Winter Games in South Korea, Pence pledged that
Washington would "intensify its maximum pressure campaign" on
the North, working with Tokyo.
"I'm announcing today that the United States will soon
unveil the toughest and most aggressive round of economic
sanctions on North Korea ever," he said, without giving
further details.
Pence's three-day visit to Japan came as Washington seeks
to bolster ties with its allies in the region and maintain
pressure on the regime in Pyongyang despite a recent thaw on
the peninsula.
"All options are on the table and the US has deployed
some of our most advanced military assets to Japan and the
wider region to protect our homeland and our allies and we
will continue to," vowed Pence.
To highlight what Washington calls the regime's human
rights "abuses", the vice president will attend the opening
ceremony of the Pyeongchang Olympics with the father of the
late former North Korea prisoner Otto Warmbier.
The US and North Korea have been locked in a fierce war
of words.
US President Donald Trump has mocked North Korean leader
Kim Jong-Un as "rocket man" and the young dictator has
threatened to rain nuclear destruction on the United States.
But Kim has taken a more conciliatory tone in 2018,
calling for detente with the South Koreans and accepting an
invitation for his country to participate in what is being
billed as the "peace Olympics."
The two Koreas held a rare high-level meeting last month
and the North's ceremonial head of state is due to arrive
Friday, the highest-ranking Pyongyang official ever to visit
the South.
Nevertheless, the peninsula remains tense, with the North
slamming anti-Pyongyang activists who protested against its
participation as a "spasm of psychopaths."
For his part, Abe said that Japan and the US had
"confirmed... that we can never accept a nuclear-armed North
Korea."
Abe added that the allies would urge other countries not
to be "captivated by the charm offensive of North Korea."
En route to Japan, Pence declined to rule out a meeting
with the North Korean delegation also attending the opening
ceremony, offering the faintest hope of a diplomatic
breakthrough.
"I have not requested a meeting, but we'll see what
happens," Pence said during a stop in Alaska.
However, he appeared to take a tougher line in Tokyo,
saying that North Korea must not be allowed to "hijack the
message and imagery of the Olympic Games."
"We will not allow North Korea to hide behind the Olympic
banner the reality that they enslave their people and threaten
the wider region," he said.
It is not clear how long any respite in tensions will
last after the Games, especially when the United States and
South Korea resume their delayed joint annual military
exercises, a perennial irritant for Pyongyang.
North Korea's official KCNA news agency warned on Tuesday
the resumption of the drills will throw the Korean peninsula
back to "the grim phase of catastrophe".