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Kerry warns of 'forceful ways' against N. Korea

US Secretary of State John Kerry warned Tuesday that the US could seek "more forceful ways" to affect North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's thinking if he persists in forging ahead with intercontinental ballistic missile capabilities.

Kim threatened last week that the communist nation reached the final stage of preparations to test-fire an ICBM apparently capable of reaching the continental US.

"If he persists, as he said he would the other day, in moving forward on the intercontinental ballistic missile front, it more immediately drags the United States into an immediate threat situation, to which we then may have to find other ways or more forceful ways of having an impact on the choices that he is making," Kerry said during a visit to the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. He did not elaborate on what those "forceful ways" could be.

Kerry also said North Korea is the No. 1 challenge for the incoming administration.

"My advice to the next administration is that this is at the top. I don't get into first or second or third, but this is at the top of a short group of major priorities. This is one of the most serious, if not the most serious," he said.

Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a news conference at the State Department in Washington (Yonhap)
Secretary of State John Kerry speaks during a news conference at the State Department in Washington (Yonhap)
"There's a reckless dictator who holds his country effectively in a gulag, in a kind of prison. He's unpredictable, and recklessness and unpredictability for somebody who has their hands on nuclear weapons is a very genuine threat, and particularly as they pursue intercontinental ballistic capacity, which would threaten the United States of America," Kerry said.

Kerry said the US will never accept the North as a nuclear state.

The outgoing top diplomat also said the next administration should increase pressure on the North.

"We will make it clear to the incoming administration that there are diplomatic ways of increasing the pressure, which we've been ratcheting up," he said.

Cooperation with China is critical in resolving the North Korea problem, he said.

"China provides 100 percent of the fuel that goes to North Korea -- every airplane, every truck, every car that moves in North Korea gets its fuel from China," he said. "China also is the facilitator, through Beijing, for the banking system and for whatever movement of commerce there is, of money, etc., for the North Koreans."

"My counsel to the next administration will be to work with China very, very closely and try to get the Chinese to, in fact, have a greater impact on the North in order to affect their behavior," he said. (Yonhap)

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