North
Korea orders rockets on standby to hit US bases - state media
Pyongyang
has ordered rocket units be put on standby to fire on US bases in the
South Pacific. “The time has come to settle accounts with the US
imperialists in view of the prevailing situation,” North Korean
leader declared, according to state media.
RT,
28
March, 2013
It
follows a US B-2 flyover of South Korea that saw dummy ammunition
dropped as part of a joint military drill Thursday.
The
North Korean leader and army marshal Kim Jong-un declared that “the
revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK would react to the US nuclear
blackmail with a merciless nuclear attack, and war of aggression with
an all-out war of justice,” according to KCNA.
The
decree placing the Strategic Rocket Force on standby was signed
following an urgent meeting of the military command early Friday
morning, according to North Korean media. The plan suggests that
ballistic rockets would be permanently targeted at American military
installations in the Pacific, including Hawaii and Guam, as well as
those in South Korea.
In
the case of another US "provocation" like the B2 flyover, a
North Korean propaganda release says, the Korean People's Army
"should mercilessly strike the US mainland, their stronghold,
their military bases in the operational theaters in the Pacific,
including Hawaii and Guam, and those in south Korea."
Earlier
on Thursday US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel denied that the United
States’ war games in the Korean peninsula had aggravated the
situation in the region.
Hagel
said that “this new young leader” of North Korea had “ratcheted
up the danger” with his actions and aggressive tone.
"We
have to take seriously every provocative, bellicose word and action
that this new young leader has taken so far,” Hagel told a Pentagon
news conference.
U.S.
Runs Practice Sortie in South Korea
28
March, 2013
The
American military on Thursday carried out a rare long-range mission
over the Korean Peninsula, sending two nuclear-capable B-2 stealth
bombers on a practice bombing sortie over South Korea, underscoring
Washington’s commitment to defend its ally amid rising tensions
with North Korea.
Multimedia
The
two B-2 Spirit bombers showed the United States’ ability to
“provide extended deterrence to our allies in the Asia-Pacific
region” and to “conduct long-range, precision strikes quickly and
at will,” the American command in the South Korean capital, Seoul,
said in a statement.
This
mission was the first time the bat-winged B-2s were launched toward
the Korean Peninsula on a nonstop, round-trip mission from the United
States. The bombers dropped inert munitions, not live explosives, on
a range off South Korea’s coast.
While
the mock bombing run was part of a previously planned joint exercise
between South Korean and American forces, it came at a time of rising
rhetorical tension with the North. At a Pentagon news conference on
Thursday, senior officials made clear that the mission was intended
to serve as a deterrent to North Korea — and to reassure South
Korea and Japan, both allies.
“The
reaction to the B-2 that we’re most concerned about is not
necessarily the reaction it might elicit in North Korea, but rather
among our Japanese and Korean allies,” Gen. Martin E. Dempsey,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said during the news
conference. “Those exercises are mostly to assure our allies that
they can count on us to be prepared and to help them deter conflict.”
As
the mission was being announced in an official statement, Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel conferred with his South Korean counterpart,
Kim Kwan-jin, on the phone, reaffirming the United States’
“unwavering” commitment to defend the South.
In
response to the United States mission, North Korea’s leader, Kim
Jong-un, convened an urgent operational meeting of his Korean
People’s Army’s top command early Friday and ordered it to
prepare its rockets “so that they may strike any time the U.S.
mainland, its military bases in the operational theaters in the
Pacific, including Hawaii and Guam, and those in South Korea,” the
North’s official Korean Central News Agency reported.
American
officials continued to criticize North Korea for the provocative
language, but noted that the latest threat was, in essence, a
repetition of statements issued over recent days that the North’s
artillery and missile forces were being put on higher alert.
After
suffering from the American carpet-bombing during the Korean War,
North Korea remains sensitive about American bombers. It keeps most
of its key military installations underground, and its war cries
typically reach a frenetic pitch when American bombers fly over South
Korea during military exercises. The resulting fear and anti-American
sentiment is used by the government to make people rally behind the
North’s “military first” leadership.
Both
B-52 and B-2 planes can launch nuclear-armed cruise missiles. The
Pentagon used the training sorties over the Korean Peninsula to
highlight the role the long-distance strategic bombers play as part
of Washington’s “nuclear umbrella” over South Korea and Japan.
In South Korea, North Korea’s successful launching of a three-stage
rocket in December and its nuclear test last month were unsettling
enough that several right-wing politicians began calling on their
government to build nuclear arms.
North
Korea has escalated its bellicose talk since a Feb. 12 nuclear test.
It threatened pre-emptive nuclear strikes against the United States
and South Korea for conducting joint military drills and supporting
United Nations sanctions against the North.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.