From
Send to
International

Trump calls N. Korea 'world menace' that should be dealt with 'soon'

March 2, 2017 - 09:51 By KH디지털2

US President Donald Trump called North Korea "a world menace" and "a world problem" that must be dealt with "soon" on the eve of his first speech to a joint session of Congress, even though he made no mention of the problem during the address, a report said.

Trump made the remark when he had dinner at the White House Monday evening with a group of 18 reporters from regional TV affiliates around the country, according to WCPO-TV, an ABC-affiliated television station in Cincinnati, Ohio.
 

US President Donald Trump (Yonhap)

"North Korea is a world menace, it is a world problem," Trump said, adding that the country has to be dealt with and "has to be dealt with soon," according to the report.

No further remarks on North Korea were available.

The dinner with reporters was part of the White House efforts to reach the communities that voted for Trump.

Tuesday's address to Congress was devoted mostly to domestic and economic issues.

The only foreign threat Trump talked about in the speech was the militant group Islamic State. He vowed to "work with our allies, including our friends and allies in the Muslim world, to extinguish this vile enemy from our planet."

The lack of any mention of North Korea was also against expectations because Trump has made a series of remarks in recent weeks about the threats the communist nation poses, especially since the North's latest missile launch on Feb. 12.

In a media interview last week, Trump said he is "very angry" at the North's missile launch, and that it's too late to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. He called the situation "very dangerous" and said China can solve the problem "very easily if they want to."

Earlier this month, he called the North "a big, big problem," a "really, really important" subject, and said he will deal with it "very strongly." After summit talks with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe earlier this month, Trump said that defending against the North's nuclear and missile threat is "a very, very high priority" for him. (Yonhap)