The United States has asked North “to refrain from provocative” actions amid rising tensions between the two countries.
“We call on [North ] to refrain from provocative, destabilizing actions and rhetoric, and to make the strategic choice to fulfill its international obligations and commitments and return to serious talks,” Navy Commander Gary Ross, a Pentagon spokesman, said on Monday.
“North unlawful weapons programs represent a clear, grave threat to national security,” he added.
The statement came a day after North threatened to sink an American aircraft carrier that President Donald Trump is sending to the western Pacific Ocean.
“Our revolutionary forces are combat-ready to sink a nuclear powered aircraft carrier with a single strike,” North ruling Workers’ Party newspaper said in a commentary on Sunday.
The article said Pyongyang had weaponry that “can reach continental and Asia Pacific region.”
The USS Carl Vinson is currently conducting exercises with two Japanese destroyers in the Philippines Sea.
Last week, President Trump called on China to rein in North .
“China is very much the economic lifeline to North so, while nothing is easy, if they want to solve the North Korean problem, they will,” he tweeted.
On Sunday, Trump spoke on the phone with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as well as Chinese President Xi Jinping to discuss the North Korean issue.
After the phone call with Trump, Abe told reporters Monday that he and Trump had agreed to keep close contact on North . He appreciated Trump’s stance of keeping “all options on the table” regarding Pyongyang.
The Trump administration has several times warned that all options, including a military strike, were being considered to halt Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear activities.
“The North Korean nuclear and missile problem is an extremely serious security threat to not only the international community but also our country,” Abe told reporters.
Xi, the Chinese president, told his American counterpart during the telephone call that all sides had to exercise restraint.
China has opposed any move that runs counter to the UN Security Council resolutions already in place against North .
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping
Tensions have increased between North and the in recent weeks. The has been unnerved by North ’s advancing missile and nuclear programs and has dispatched a military strike group to the Korean Peninsula. Pyongyang has said it is ready for war.
The prospects of a potential military confrontation have made regional countries worried.
North has threatened the with “all-out war” and announced that Pyongyang would continue to test missiles on a weekly basis.
Pyongyang says its missile and nuclear programs act as deterrence against a potential invasion by its adversaries, particularly the .
The has military forces in South on a permanent basis, and routinely threatens the North with military action.