Albuquerque Journal

Trump attacks China after report of oil transfer to N. Korea

UN sanctions prohibit ship-to-ship trade with the regime

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump attacked China on Thursday after reports that Chinese ships transferre­d oil to North Korean vessels at sea in violation of U.N. sanctions over the North’s nuclear weapons program.

Trump said on Twitter that China had been “Caught RED HANDED,” adding he was “very disappoint­ed that China is allowing oil to go into North Korea.”

“There will never be a friendly solution to the North Korea problem if this continues to happen!” the president said, without citing the source of his informatio­n.

China accounts for the vast majority of N. Korea’s external trade and oil supplies. Just two weeks ago, Trump credited China for its help in the U.S.-led pressure campaign against Pyongyang, including support for three U.N. Security Council resolution­s this year — the latest last week — over the North’s nuclear and missile tests.

However, on Tuesday, the South Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo cited unidentifi­ed S. Korean government officials as saying U.S. reconnaiss­ance satellites have spotted Chinese ships transferri­ng oil to N. Korean vessels some 30 times since October. That report was picked up by some U.S. media outlets, including Fox News.

China’s foreign ministry has defended its enforcemen­t of U.N. sanctions against N. Korea. A ministry spokeswoma­n said Wednesday she had no informatio­n about the latest report, but said China has strictly enforced trade restrictio­ns.

The State Department did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on that report. But in a commentary Thursday, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urged Beijing to exert “decisive economic leverage” on Pyongyang.

“China has applied certain import bans and sanctions, but it could and should do more,” he wrote in The New York Times.

Ship-to-ship trade with N. Korea at sea is prohibited under U.N. sanctions adopted Sept. 11. The latest sanctions, adopted Friday in response to the test of a North Korean interconti­nental ballistic missile, also impose sharp reductions on imports of refined oil products by the isolated nation.

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