President Donald Trump warned Sunday that North Korea's Kim Jong Un had "everything" to lose through hostility towards the United States, after Pyongyang said it had carried out a major new weapons test.
"Kim
Jong Un is too smart and has far too much to lose, everything actually, if he
acts in a hostile way," Trump tweeted in response to the unspecified test
at the Sohae space launch center.
The
announcement of Saturday's test came just hours after Trump said he would be
"surprised" by any hostile action from the North, emphasizing his
"very good relationship" with Kim.
Trump and
Kim engaged in months of mutual insults and threats of devastation in 2017,
sending tensions soaring before a diplomatic rapprochement the following year.
The pair
have met three times since June 2018 but with little progress towards
denuclearization. Pyongyang has set Washington a December 31 deadline to make
new concessions to kickstart stalled talks.
"North
Korea, under the leadership of Kim Jong Un, has tremendous economic potential,
but it must denuclearize as promised," Trump tweeted. "NATO, China,
Russia, Japan, and the entire world is unified on this issue!"
Writing
that Kim had "signed a strong Denuclearization Agreement" at their
June 2018 summit in Singapore," Trump warned: "He does not want to
void his special relationship with the President of the United States or
interfere with the U.S. Presidential Election in November."
A spokesman
for North Korea's Academy of the National Defense Science said Saturday's
"very important test" would have an "important effect" on
changing the "strategic position" of North Korea, in a statement
carried by the official KCNA news agency.
The
statement did not provide further details on the test.
A senior US
administration official earlier said Washington had seen reports of a test and
was "coordinating closely with allies and partners."
Trump
indicated that military action was still possible when he was asked about
Pyongyang on the sidelines of a NATO summit in Britain this week.
North Korea
fired back that if the United States used military force it would take
"prompt corresponding actions at any level."
UN
diplomats fear that North Korea will resume long-range nuclear or ballistic
tests if no progress is made soon in talks with the United States.
Sohae, on
North Korea's northwest coast, is ostensibly a facility designed for putting
satellites into orbit.
But
Pyongyang has carried out several rocket launches there that were condemned by
the US and others as disguised long-range ballistic missile tests.
Following
the Singapore summit, Trump said Kim had agreed to destroy "a major
missile engine testing site" without naming the facility.
Kim then
agreed to shutter the Sohae site during a summit last year with South Korean
President Moon Jae-in in Pyongyang as part of trust-building measures.

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