The U.S.
bombardment of a Syrian airbase just outside of Homs Friday was likely seen by
North Korea as a clear warning that President Trump will use his military if
United States interests are at risk.
The
immediate focus after the strikes was on Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s reaction.
Russia was not happy with the U.S., it spoke in defense of Syria and moved
warships. But now the attention is on the next move by another world leader:
Kim Jong-Un.
Gordon
Chang, a Daily Beast columnist and author of “Nuclear Showdown: North Korea
Takes On The World,” said in an emailed statement to Fox News Friday that the
U.S. strike on the Syrian airfield “tells North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un that
he must now heed American military power, something that he probably dismissed
before.”
“Kim’s
father, Kim Jong Il, disappeared from public view for about six weeks in 2003
at the time of the Iraq war. Kim Jong-Un loves the public spotlight, and it
will be telling if he similarly goes into hiding,” the author said.
The
airstrikes are “a warning to China’s People’s Liberation Army, which had grown
dismissive of the U.S. Navy and Air Force.
Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader visiting Mar-a-Lago, almost certainly
interpreted the strike as a sign of disrespect to him,” Chang said.
Retired
four-star Gen. Jack Keane told Fox News on Wednesday that the U.S. is
"rapidly and dangerously heading towards the reality that the military
option is the only one left when it comes to getting North Korea to
denuclearize and not weaponized [intercontinental ballistic missiles]."
Trump made
it a point to address the media about the Syria strike at his Mar-a-Lago resort
in Florida just moments after dining with his Chinese counterpart President Xi
Jinping.
The strike
was a culmination of a rapid, three-day transformation for Trump, who has long
opposed deeper U.S. involvement in Syria's civil war. Advisers said he was
outraged by heartbreaking images of young children who were among the dozens killed
in the chemical attack and ordered his national security team to swiftly
prepare military options. The Los Angeles Times reported up to 15 dead in the
strikes. A Syrian official said six were killed at the base and nine others in
surrounding areas. The death toll could not be independently confirmed.
“This is
Trump saying, ‘No, I am a man of my words,’” Reva Goujon, the vice president of
Stratfor, told CNBC. “’When I make a threat, I will follow through.’ That’s
certainly something the Chinese and North Koreans will be thinking about.”
Trump has
said that if China doesn't exert more pressure on North Korea, the U.S. will
act alone. The missile strikes on Syria bring more weight to that statement.
(Foxnews)
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