By Scott Neuman
September 5, 2017
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that North Korea's
Kim Jong Un would have his people "eat grass" before giving up his
nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.
Putin was attending a meeting in Xiamen, China, of leaders of
five emerging economic powers known as BRICS – Brazil, Russia, India, China and
South Africa.
Speaking at a news
conference touching on a wide range of issues, the Russian leader echoed a
phrase attributed to former Pakistan Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the
father of Benazir Bhutto, who said in 1965 that Pakistanis "will eat
grass, even go hungry" to acquire an atomic bomb. The South Asian country
detonated its first nuclear device in 1998.
"They would
rather eat grass but will not give up the [nuclear] program if they do not feel
safe," Putin was quoted by The Associated Press as saying.
He described the
bombastic rhetoric being traded between Washington and Pyongyang in recent
weeks as "military hysteria."
"[This] will
lead to no good," Putin said. "It could cause a global catastrophe
and an enormous loss of life."
As we reported on Monday, U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations Nikki Haley told an emergency Security Council meeting on Monday that
Pyongyang was "begging for war." Putin said that
given the North Korean leadership's determination to acquire weapons of mass
destruction, he doubted whether sanctions would have any deterrent effect.
Asked by reporters
what he thought about the possibility of President Trump being impeached, Putin
also quipped that Trump is "not my bride, and I am not his groom."
He also took the opportunity to lash out at the United States
for closing Russian diplomatic compounds. The closing of two luxury estates, one
in Maryland and another in New York, by the Obama administration in December
came in retaliation for Russian interference in U.S. presidential elections.
Putin called the
seizure of the compounds "an obvious violation of property rights."
Putin said that Russia would sue the U.S. over the closure, an action that was
confirmed later by the Kremlin.
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