President
Donald Trump of the United States has faced serious attack from North
Korea's leader Kim Jong-Un who called him an incurably mentally deranged
man.
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)
President Donald Trump
In a proxy war of abuse, ‘Rocket Man’ Kim Jong Un North Korea’s news agency has slammed US President Donald Trump as “incurably mentally deranged”.
The invective comes few days before Trump begins his first visit to
Asia as head of state, amid high tensions over Pyongyang’s nuclear
ambitions.
Trump and the North’s leader Kim Jong-Un have traded threats of war
and personal insults against each other in recent months, heightening
worries about a potential conflict on the divided Korean peninsula.
Trump has warned of “fire and fury” and “calm before the storm”, telling the UN General Assembly that Washington would “totally destroy North Korea” if it had to defend itself or its allies.
He dubbed Kim “Rocket Man” in the same speech — Pyongyang
has tested missiles apparently capable of reaching much of the US
mainland — and days later Kim responded with a personal statement
calling Trump a “dotard”, an obscure term for a weak or senile old man.
The US president is due in Asia at the weekend and ahead of his
arrival the North’s state-run KCNA news agency lashed out at “bellicose
and irresponsible rhetoric ”by the “master of invective”.
“He absolutely needs medicine for curing his psychical disorder,” it said.
The US has deployed key military assets including jet fighters and
aircraft carriers near the peninsula following the North’s sixth nuclear
test in September, which also saw the United Nations impose an eighth
set of sanctions on the isolated country.
KCNA described the sanctions drive as “desperate efforts” that would prove ineffective and Trump’s hostile rhetoric as “hysteric spasmodic symptoms”.
Trump, it said late Tuesday, “disclosed his true nature as a nuclear war maniac before the world and was diagnosed as ‘incurably mentally deranged'”.
Trump’s itinerary includes Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and
the Philippines, with all eyes on his message to the North and Kim.
Pyongyang says it needs nuclear weapons to defend itself against possible invasion by the US.
During a November 7-8 visit to the South — a security ally of
Washington that hosts 28,500 US troops — Trump is due to address Seoul’s
parliament and visit a US military base, although he will not go to the
Demilitarized Zone that divides the Koreas.
When News Breaks Out, We Break In. (The 2014 Bloggies Finalist)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.