North Korea backs Donald Trump for President

Donald Trump has received an unusual endorsement from North Korea, which on Tuesday hailed the New York billionaire as a "wise politician" and the right choice over "thick-headed Hillary" for US voters.

In a column in state newspaper DPRK Today, Trump was described as a "prescient presidential candidate" who can liberate Americans. It criticised the most likely Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton over her proposal to apply Iranian-style sanctions to resolve the nuclear weapons fears on the Korean peninsula.

In contrast Trump told Reuters he was prepared to talk to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to try to stop Pyongyang's nuclear program, and that China should also help solve the problem.

North Korea, known officially as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), is under UN sanctions after it carried out nuclear tests.

DPRK Today also said Trump's suggestion that the US should pull its troops from South Korea until Seoul pays more was the way to achieve Korean unification.

"It turns out that Trump is not the rough-talking, screwy, ignorant candidate they say he is, but is actually a wise politician and a prescient presidential candidate," said the column, written by a China-based Korean scholar identified as Han Yong Muk.

DPRK Today is among a handful of news sites run by the isolated North, although its content is not always handled by the main state-run media.

It said promising to resolve issues on the Korean peninsula through "negotiations and not war" was the best option for America, which it said is "living every minute and second on pins and needles in fear of a nuclear strike" by North Korea.

The North has for years called for the withdrawal of US troops from the South as the first step toward peace on the Korean peninsula and demanded Washington sign a peace treaty to replace the truce that ended the 1950-53 Korean War.

Its frequently strident rhetoric also often threatens nuclear strikes against South Korea and the United States.

Additional reporting by Reuters.

related articles
Cameron says he will meet Trump despite 'dangerous' Muslim comments

Cameron says he will meet Trump despite 'dangerous' Muslim comments

Death squads and rape jokes: Why the Philippines\' new president is no laughing matter
Death squads and rape jokes: Why the Philippines' new president is no laughing matter

Death squads and rape jokes: Why the Philippines' new president is no laughing matter

Trump\'s new \'liaison for Christian policy\' claims he stopped a tsunami through prayer
Trump's new 'liaison for Christian policy' claims he stopped a tsunami through prayer

Trump's new 'liaison for Christian policy' claims he stopped a tsunami through prayer

Jimmy Carter: Donald Trump's success is because of 'inherent racism' in US

Jimmy Carter: Donald Trump's success is because of 'inherent racism' in US

Donald Trump wins enough delegates to secure Republican nomination

Donald Trump wins enough delegates to secure Republican nomination

News
Churches need to support marriage, says Les Isaac 
Churches need to support marriage, says Les Isaac 

The Street Pastors founder said that Christian marriages are in need of serious help and repair.

How digital technology is bringing the Welsh Bible to more people
How digital technology is bringing the Welsh Bible to more people

The digital age is making the Welsh Bible even more accessible.

The story of St David’s Day
The story of St David’s Day

Every year on March 1, people across Wales and Welsh communities around the world mark St David’s Day - a celebration of the country’s patron saint, its culture, and its proud heritage. But who was St David and why is he Wales’ patron saint?

What a recent doctor's visit taught me about modern Britain
What a recent doctor's visit taught me about modern Britain

Attention is one of the purest forms of love but so many people are going unnoticed, writes J John.