Update: President Trump says that perhaps his "fire and fury" warning to North Korea "wasn't tough enough." He issued a new warning over North Korea's development of nuclear weapons and said they "better get their act together or they are going to be in trouble like few nations have ever been in trouble."
The president was addressing reporters during his vacation at his New Jersey golf club before a security briefing with top advisers.
It's the latest warning since he said earlier this week that North Korea faces "retaliation with fire and fury unlike any the world has seen before."
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North Korea has said it may attack Guam in retaliation.
This story was originally published on August 9, 2017.
On August 8 Donald Trump told reporters that “North Korea best not make any more threats" or they'd be "met with fire and fury and frankly power the likes of which this world has never seen before." The inflammatory comments, which were made from his golf club in New Jersey, sparked anxiety at home and abroad and left some people fearful that the United States and North Korea are on the verge of a nuclear war.
Today North Korea officially dismissed Trump's threats of "fire and fury," declaring the American leader "bereft of reason." The country also issued an ominous warning that, "Only absolute force can work on [Trump]."
In a statement released on state media, General Kim Rak Gyom, who heads North Korea's rocket command, also said his country was "about to take" military action near the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam. He said the North would finalise a plan by mid-August involving mid-range missiles hitting waters 30 to 40 kilometres (19 to 25 miles) away from the island.
The plan will then go to the commander in chief of North Korea's nuclear force and "wait for his order," Kim was quoted by KCNA as saying. He called it a "historic enveloping fire at Guam."
The statement only served to escalate tensions even further in a week that has seen a barrage of threats from both sides. While nuclear confrontation still seems incredibly remote, the comments have sparked deep unease in the United States, Asia, and beyond.
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A day after evoking the use of overwhelming U.S. military might, Trump touted America's atomic supremacy. He said his first order as president was to "renovate and modernise" an arsenal that is "now far stronger and more powerful than ever before."
It was a rare public flexing of America's nuclear might. And Trump's boasting only added to the confusion over his administration's approach to dealing with North Korea's expanding nuclear capabilities on a day when his top national security aides wavered between messages of alarm and reassurance.
If Trump's goal with two days of tough talk was to scare North Korea, Kim, the commander, put that idea quickly to rest.
He called Trump's rhetoric a "load of nonsense" that was aggravating a grave situation.
"Sound dialogue is not possible with such a guy bereft of reason and only absolute force can work on him," the KNCA report quoted him saying.
Kim said the Guam action would be "an effective remedy for restraining the frantic moves of the U.S. in the southern part of the Korean peninsula and its vicinity."
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