WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump’s tweet about having a
bigger nuclear button than Kim Jong Un’s has kept the North Korean
leader “on his toes” and made clear the risks of a nuclear standoff,
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said on Sunday.
After Kim asserted that he had a nuclear button at the ready, Trump
last week dismissed the taunt by saying in a tweet that the U.S. button
at his disposal was bigger and more powerful.
The comment drew
criticism, including from former Vice President Joe Biden, who said it
caused allies to lose confidence in Washington.
Asked
on the ABC program “This Week” whether the president’s tweet was a good
idea, Haley said: “I think that (Trump) always has to keep Kim on his
toes. It’s very important that we don’t ever let him get so arrogant
that he doesn’t realize the reality of what would happen if he started a
nuclear war.”
Haley said North Korea should be clear that the United States will not reduce pressure on Kim.
“We’re not going to let them go and dramatize the fact that they have
a button right on their desk and they can destroy America,” she said.
“We want to always remind them we can destroy you too, so be very
cautious and careful with your words and what you do.”
ClA
Director Mike Pompeo also defended Trump’s nuclear button comment on the
CBS “Face the Nation” program, saying it was “consistent with U.S.
policy,” which was denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.
Pompeo said he still believed, as he had said in October, that North
Korea is just a few months away from crossing the threshold to putting a
U.S. city at risk of nuclear attack. But he declined to be more
precise.
The Central Intelligence Agency head also rejected a New
York Times article on Sunday that reported U.S. intelligence agencies
had been unable to foresee the North’s rapid nuclear strides over the
past several months.
Pompeo said U.S. intelligence had
provided an understanding of North Korea’s capabilities and intent, and
got the pace of the nuclear program “mostly right.”
In a
separate appearance on the “Fox News Sunday” TV program, Pompeo asserted
that North Korea was being “strangled” by Trump and this was the reason
why it had agreed to hold official talks soon with South Korea.