What
a bizarre and novel idea that an ICBM test might possibly upset the
North Koreans!- LOL
US
delays intercontinental missile test over N. Korea tensions
RT,
7
April, 2013
The
Pentagon has put on hold an intercontinental ballistic missile test
in California, planned for next week, citing rising tensions with
North Korea.
According to an official,
speaking to AP on condition of anonymity, Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel has expressed concern that performing any tests at present
could be misconstrued and lead to an escalation of the situation with
North Korea. He therefore, decided to postpone the 'Minuteman 3'
missile test until next month, the official said on Friday –
although the test itself bears no connection to the ongoing military
exercises between South Korea and the US around the Korean Peninsula.
The defense official
added that "this is the logical, prudent and responsible
course of action to take."
The 450 'Minuteman 3'
missiles America has can circle the globe, and are part of the three
branches of the US nuclear arsenal. Other such weapons include
submarine-launched ballistic missiles and those capable of being
launched by bombers and stealth bombers, like the B-52 and the B-2.
Some of the latest
developments in the current escalation of war rhetoric between the
United States and North Korea have included Pyongyang declaring that
it now has final
approval for a nuclear strike on US bases in
the Pacific and South Korea. The announcement earlier this week came
on the heels of the US deploying its F-22 fighter jets, a ‘USS
Fitzgerald’ destroyer, and strengthening its missile defenses in
the region.
In the meantime, North
Korea has sent out a
proposal to
all foreign embassies on its territory to evacuate, although, so far
no embassy has done so.
“The security of the
German embassy and its exposure to danger are continually being
evaluated,” the German Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “For
now, the embassy can continue working.”
Currently, about two
dozen countries have embassies in North Korea. Most of the
represented governments have already made it clear they had no
immediate plans to withdraw personnel; some suggested the advisory
was just a ruse to fuel growing global anxiety over the current
crisis on the Korean Peninsula.
“We believe they
have taken this step as part of their country's rhetoric that the US
poses a threat to them,” a British Foreign Office
spokeswoman said.
Tensions are now higher
than they have been at any moment during this latest standoff, which
followed Pyongyang’s third
mid-range missile test in
February, provoking international condemnation and a fresh round of
UN Security Council sanctions, to which Pyongyang has replied with
the threat of a nuclear strike on the US.
Last week,
Pyongyang declared it
had entered a state of war with its southern neighbor, following an
earlier decision to withdrawal from the 60-year armistice that ended
the Korean War. North Korea had previously threatened to pull out of
the 1953 armistice if the South did not halt a joint annual military
exercise with the US.
Despite the worrying
rhetoric and the displays of military power between the two
countries, Washington says it has no evidence of North Korea engaging
in any kind of mobilization effort for a large-scale attack.
U.S.
Army Patriot missile air defence artillery batteries are seen at
U.S. Osan air base in Osan, south of Seoul April 5, 2013.(Reuters /
Lee Jae-Won)

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