I personally think that Americans should not be allowed to travel to North Korea AT ALL after what happened to Warmbier. And maybe the U.S. should pressure countries not to hire North Koreans anywhere on earth outside of North Korea too. And ICBM technology going to Iran from North Korea must stop too. However, I'm not sure Trump is the one who could pull all this off since he is under fire from investigations of "obstruction of Justice". I think Trump just has too many balls in the air at once already to be effective at foreign policy (or anything else) at this point. He might as well be a "Lame Duck President already". He just keeps shooting himself in the foot over and over again until he is lame.
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Anger over Warmbier death grows amid calls for travel ban
CNN | - |
Washington
(CNN) Anger over Otto Warmbier's fate continued to build Tuesday, with
lawmakers declaring his death a "murder" and calling for travel
restrictions to North Korea while the Trump administration considered
how to respond.
Anger over Warmbier death grows amid calls for travel ban
Story highlights
- Administration officials say the White House is considering its options
Washington (CNN)Anger
over Otto Warmbier's fate continued to build Tuesday, with lawmakers
declaring his death a "murder" and calling for travel restrictions to
North Korea while the Trump administration considered how to respond.
The
Warmbier family announced Tuesday that the 22-year-old will be laid to
rest Thursday morning in Ohio, as Republican and Democratic lawmakers
decried his treatment by Pyongyang and floated the idea of banning
American travel to North Korea as a first step.
The calls for a response come as spy satellites detected new activity
at North Korea's underground nuclear test site for the first time in
several weeks, according to two US officials who spoke to CNN. They also
said military options for North Korea have recently been updated and
will be presented to President Donald Trump if there is a nuclear test.
However,
on the eve of a high-level meeting with China, Pyongyang's largest
trade partner and closest ally, the Trump administration has sounded a
more cautious note, saying that they hold North Korea responsible for
Warmbier's death but giving no indication of how they will respond.
Officials
from Trump down have expressed sadness about the college student's
fate, but say that for now, they haven't decided on a course of action.
"We
hold North Korea accountable for Otto Warmbier's unjust imprisonment,"
State Department spokesman Heather Nauert said Tuesday. "We're still
considering our options."
"We have
a great deal of resolve to try to handle the situation and try to hold
North Korea responsible for the death of Mr. Warmbier and bring back
those three Americans who do remain there," Nauert added.
Trump tweeted a somewhat conciliatory sounding message to
Beijing, saying "while I greatly appreciate the efforts of President Xi
& China to help with North Korea, it has not worked out. At least I
know China tried!"
He also tweeted that "the U.S. once again condemns the brutality of the North Korean regime as we mourn its latest victim."
The
usual menu of retaliatory measures against North Korea include
sanctions that target its businesses and officials. Many lawmakers and
analysts say the next step has to be sanctioning Chinese companies that
do business with North Korea.
And lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are urging consideration of a ban on American travel to the isolated country.
Sen.
Bob Corker, the Tennessee Republican who chairs the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, raised the issue on MSNBC: "Examining the travel
implications and the fact that Americans do end up caught up in this
situation, and should there be a travel ban for US citizens going there
relative to this?" Corker said. "That's something we're looking at."
He noted that there are three other Americans detained in North Korea with "trumped-up charges against them."
Corker
added: "We have to figure out whether it's best to allow people to do
that, and then end up in a situation where we're doing everything we can
as a nation to get them out."
His
colleague from Washington state, Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell, called
for licensing of humanitarian groups that enter the country. "We
obviously want humanitarian work to continue in North Korea, but I think
we need to think hard about making it safer for our citizens who do
travel there."
The framework for a travel ban is already in place.
Last
month, California Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff and his Republican
colleague Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina introduced the North Korea
Travel Control Act. The bill would require the Treasury to issue
regulations requiring a license for transactions related to travel to,
from and within North Korea by US citizens -- and bar licenses for
tourist travel.
Schiff was among
many lawmakers who deemed Warmbier's death a "murder," echoing Arizona
Republican Sen. John McCain, Minnesota Democratic Sen. Al Franken and
others when he said in a statement that "the barbaric treatment of Otto
Warmbier by the North Korean regime amounts to the murder of a US
citizen."
Asked about potential travel restrictions, the State Department's Nauert said, "we're contemplating that right now."
Referring
to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, she added, "the secretary has the
authority to do it, he just has not come to a conclusion about how this
would potentially work."
Nauert
stressed that the State Department issued a travel warning for North
Korea that lays out the dangers. "We think that our travel warning that
we've had in place for some time is quite strong," she said.
Still,
Americans continue to travel there for the novelty as well as to teach
in universities and do discreet missionary work. About 17 US citizens
have been detained in the past 10 years, including the three Americans
who remain imprisoned there.
Warmbier
had gone for five days of sightseeing in 2016, only to be jailed for
allegedly stealing a poster from a hotel and sentenced to 15 years of
hard labor. He was imprisoned for 17 months before being returned to the
US, comatose, on June 13.
Eastern
Vision, a Hong Kong-based tour company that specializes in travel for
university students and new graduates, stopped taking US citizens on
tours to North Korea in early 2016, after Warmbier's arrest.
The
company had previously taken two other Americans on a student exchange
in Hong Kong to North Korea, co-founder Rubio Chan told CNN on Tuesday.
In the wake of Warmbier's death, Chan said the company will continue
that suspension.
On Tuesday, South
Korean President Moon Jae-in expressed regrets over Warmbier's death and
sent condolences to his friends and family, according to presidential
spokesman Park Soo-hyun.
In an
interview with a foreign media outlet, Moon said, "it is deplorable that
North Korea does not respect human rights, which are the universal
norms and values of humankind."
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