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Trump declares North Korea 'sponsor of terror'

President Trump has announced that the US is re-designating North Korea a state sponsor of terrorism, nine years after it was removed from the list.
In a cabinet meeting, he said the move would trigger "very large" additional sanctions to be announced on Tuesday.
But Secretary of State Rex Tillerson later admitted that "the practical effects may be limited".
Mr Trump blamed the country's nuclear programme, and support for what he called international acts of terrorism.
While announcing the decision at the White House, the US president said it "should have happened a long time ago".
In September, the US proposed a range of United Nations sanctions against North Korea, including an oil ban and a freeze on leader Kim Jong-un's assets.
It followed the North's sixth nuclear test and repeated missile launches.

Trump's 'symbolic' move unlikely to deter Kim

Analysis by Barbara Plett Usher, State Department correspondent, BBC News
Donald Trump's decision puts Pyongyang back on a short US blacklist of pariah regimes.
The move is part of the administration's policy to isolate North Korea diplomatically and economically. The designation allows the US to impose additional sanctions, although Pyongyang is already heavily sanctioned and many experts see the move as more symbolic than substantive.
Some suggest that this will further complicate efforts to persuade the North to give up its nuclear weapons programme. But the chances of that happening were slim anyway, as Pyongyang has refused to do so under any circumstances.

North Korea joins Iran, Sudan and Syria on a list of countries that are deemed to have repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism.
The country has been on the list before but was removed in 2008 by the administration of George W Bush as part of negotiations on the North's nuclear programme.
The campaign to reinstate it intensified after the American college student Otto Warmbier died shortly after he was released from North Korean custody.
Speaking to reporters at a White House press briefing, Mr Tillerson, the top US diplomat, said the designation was meant to hold North Korea accountable for recent actions it has taken "including assassinations outside of their country" and "using banned chemical weapons".
He admitted that given existing sanctions it was "very symbolic" but also said new measures could "disrupt and dissuade some third parties from undertaking certain activities with North Korea".
"The practical effects may be limited but hopefully we're closing off a few loopholes with this," he said.
Mr Kim continues to pursue nuclear weapons and missile programmes in defiance of UN Security Council sanctions.
He has made no secret of Pyongyang's plans to develop a missile capable of reaching the US mainland and has claimed to have developed a hydrogen bomb.
Last month, US Defence Secretary James Mattis said that the threat of nuclear attack from North Korea was increasing.
Monday's announcement comes after the president returned from an extensive tour of Asia last week.


This post first appeared on Treasureweb, please read the originial post: here

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Trump declares North Korea 'sponsor of terror'

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