Don’t Back North Korea Into a Corner, Putin Warns

SOCHI, Russia — Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Thursday that North Korea must not be “backed into a corner” and urged dialogue to end its nuclear standoff with the U.S.

Tensions have increased between Pyongyang and Washington in recent weeks, with President Donald Trump promising in August that North Korea would be met with “fire” and “fury” if it threatens the U.S.

Trump also has been calling Kim Jong Un “Rocket Man” and in a speech at the U.N. declared that the United States would “totally destroy” North Korea if forced to defend itself.

Putin did not mention the U.S. specifically, but warned of the possibility of conflict and pointed out that North Korea is a “sovereign country.”

“Problems should be solved in dialogue and North Korea should not be backed into a corner,” he said.

A series of missile and nuclear tests has rattled North Korea’s neighbors. The U.S. has responded with sanctions.

North Korea’s foreign minister last month stated that Trump had “declared war” on his country and that Kim’s regime would consider shooting down American bombers. The White House later described the notion that the U.S. had declared war as “absurd.”

Image: Kim Jong Un visits a footwear factory Image: Kim Jong Un visits a footwear factory

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visits a footwear factory in a photo released by the state-run Korean Central News Agency on Thursday. KCNA / via Reuters

North Korean officials last year also stated the country could seek to target the U.S. mainland if American nuclear forces mobilized against it.

Pyongyang has said in public statements that it wants an official end to the Korean War. The conflict was halted by a 1953 armistice but no peace treaty has been signed. It also wants nothing short of full normalization of relations with the U.S. and to be treated with respect and as an equal in the global arena.

Putin was addressing the elite of Russia’s foreign policy establishment as well as foreign guests at a meeting organized by the Valdai Discussion Club near the Black Sea resort of Sochi.

With the United States pulling back on the international stage, experts here suggested that Putin’s Russia was displaying renewed confidence.

Image: Russian President Vladimir Putin Image: Russian President Vladimir Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICHENKO / POOL / EPA

Angela Stent, director of the Center for Eurasian, Russian & East European Studies at Georgetown University, highlighted that Russia has emerged as a strong actor in the Middle East, particularly since its 2015 military intervention in the conflict in Syria.

“The U.S. even under [President Barack] Obama was pulling back from more a active role there and I think Russia has certainly come in and filled a vacuum,” she said. “Russia is the only great power in the Middle East that talks to both the Shiite and the Sunni countries, and also to Israel.”

Under the Trump administration, the U.S. has questioned international agreements such as the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate accord.

Russia in recent years has increased tensions with the annexation of Crimea in 2014 or the alleged interference in the U.S. election.

NBC News asked Sergey Kislyak, a former Russian ambassador to the United States, if the country was seeking a larger role on the international stage. He said Moscow was neither seeking a larger or smaller role.

Image: Sergey Lavrov, Donald Trump, Sergey Kislyak Image: Sergey Lavrov, Donald Trump, Sergey Kislyak

Sergey Kislyak, right, and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov meets with President Donald Trump at the White House on May 10. Kislyak served as Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. until July. Russian Foreign Ministry Photo / via AP, file

“We are what we are. We are a country, which is in its own right exceptional, which has its interests, which has ability and resolve to protect them and we will do that,” Kislyak said.

Fyodor Lukyanov, research director of the Foundation for Development and Support of the Valdai Discussion Club, said the Russian leadership sees the behavior of the U.S. as “totally unpredictable” at the moment as a result of domestic turmoil under the Trump administration.

“There is a very clear understanding on the Russian side that the situation might go out of control much easier than before,” he said, citing the North Korea crisis as an example.

Sergey Karaganov, of the Russian Council on Foreign and Defense Policy, said the West no longer dominates militarily so other actors have the ability to step in.

“Now there is an open competition,” he said, adding that Russia could use this possibility to take on a stronger role, but in a limited way.

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“We’re not going to be dominant, at most we will be a balancer and a security provider for the whole world,” Karaganov said, warning that it would be risky for Russia to get too involved.

Domestic issues will become especially important for Putin in the coming months given that he is expected to run for re-election next March, while Russia is still recovering from an economic crisis.

Putin has already spent almost 14 years as president — and boasts two other stints as the country’s prime minister.

According to pollsters, Russian voters are preoccupied with the economy, education, health insurance, pensions and social security.

Such results suggest the main challenge Putin must address before Russians head to the ballot box might not be overseas, but instead how to spur economic growth and accelerate development within the country.