US 'fully prepared' for any NKorea launch: Obama

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The United States is "fully prepared for any contingencies" regarding a potential missile launch toward US territory by North Korea, President Barack Obama said in an interview to be aired Monday.

"This administration — and our military — is fully prepared for any contingencies," Obama told CBS when asked about the possibility that North Korea could fire a missile toward Hawaii in the coming weeks.

Asked if that meant Washington was "warning of a military response," Obama answered: "No. It’s just we are prepared for any contingencies.

     But I do want to give assurances to the American people that the T’s are crossed and the I’s are dotted in terms of what might happen," he added, according to excerpts released Sunday.

The US military has beefed up its Hawaii defenses over fears Pyongyang may launch a missile at the Pacific island chain, as it tracked a North Korean ship possibly carrying banned cargo, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Thursday.

"I would just say I think we are in a good position should it become necessary to protect American territory," the Pentagon chief said.

Obama also said there was strong international consensus against Pyongyang, after it detonated its second nuclear device on May 25 — following the first one in 2006 — and went ahead with what Washington called a disguised test of a long-range missile in April.

"More broadly, I think the international community has spoken," Obama said, noting that the UN Security Council has agreed to tighter cargo inspections, a stricter arms embargo and new targeted financial curbs to choke off revenue for the North’s nuclear and missile sectors.

"That sends a signal … of a unity in the international community that we haven’t seen in quite some time," Obama said.

"And one of the things that we have been very clear about is that North Korea has a path towards rejoining the international community. And we hope they take that path. What we’re not going to do is to reward belligerence and provocation in the way that’s been done in the past."

Obama on Tuesday called Pyongyang a "grave threat" and vowed to defend South Korea after talks in Washington with South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak.

The North in turn accused Obama and Lee of "trying to ignite a nuclear war." "The US-touted provision of ‘extended deterrence, including a nuclear umbrella’ (for South Korea) is nothing but ‘a nuclear war plan,’" the North’s state-run weekly Tongil Sinbo said.

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