‘Ready to fight & win’: US marines deployed to Australia amid N. Korean ‘nuclear threat’
U.S.
Marines arrive for the sixth annual Marines' deployment at Darwin in
northern Australia, April 18, 2017. © Tom Westbrook / Reuters
RT,
18
April, 2017
US
Marines have begun to touch down in Darwin, in Australia's tropical
north, as the first of some 1,250 “stand ready to fight” against
North Korea amid warnings that Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program is
a “serious threat” to Canberra.
The
deployment will see the largest US aircraft contingent to Australia
in peacetime history, Reuters reports, adding that the 25-year annual
deployment program was launched by former US President Barack Obama
back in 2011 as part of America's ‘pivot’ to Asia. During the
six-month deployment, US Marines will conduct exercises with
Australian troops and will also visit Chinese forces.
The
US Marines’ arrival comes as Australia’s Foreign Minister Julie
Bishop voiced mounting concerns over North Korea’s nuclear
activities. Pyongyang
is striving for nuclear weapons and “has
a clear ambition to develop an intercontinental ballistic missile
capable of carrying a nuclear payload as far as the US,” Bishop
said according
to the ABC.
“That
would mean Australia would be in reach so unless it is prevented from
doing so, it will be a serious threat to the peace and stability of
our region, and that is unacceptable,”
she dded.
North
Korea launched a failed missile test on Sunday, while also warning
Washington against taking military action against it. Pyongyang’s
military pledged to “ruthlessly
ravage” the
US if the American aircraft carrier group ‘USS Carl Vinson’,
currently on its way to the region, takes aggressive
action.
In Darwin, Marine commander Lieutenant-Colonel Brian Middleton said
the 13 aircraft, including tilt-rotor Ospreys, Super Cobra
helicopters and Huey helicopters, triple the number of aircraft in
past deployments, signaling a “tangible
kind of sign of our commitment to the region and to this
partnership.”
“Regardless,
I think it is just a good move anytime we can strengthen the
long-standing partnership and alliance between our two countries.
We stand ready to fight and win the night always,” he noted,
as cited
by Reuters. “I
think that the commitment that we've taken to put a task force here
with a conversation to get larger over the years says that we do
think this is an important region.”
China’s
Foreign Minister warned last week that an armed conflict with North
Korea may break out “at
any moment,”
urging Washington and Pyongyang to tone down their hawkish rhetoric
and realize the price to pay for both sides if a new Korean War were
to start.
The
warning came amid US military drills near the Korean Peninsula and
the deployment of the American THAAD anti-missile system to South
Korea. While US President Donald Trump
is threatening to “take
care” of
the North Korean“problem,”
Pyongyang says it is ready to repel any military action.
China,
North Korea’s close ally and main trading partner, does not welcome
Pyongyang's nuclear program, but advocates finding a political
solution to the crisis. Russia, which also shares a land border with
the reclusive state, expressed deep concern over the mounting
tensions on the Korean Peninsula.
US ‘runs out of patience’
US ‘runs out of patience’
US
Vice President Mike
Pence recently
announced the “end
of strategic patience” towards
Pyongyang, adding that “all
options are on the table.”
On
Thursday, US intelligence officials told NBC that the US has sent two
destroyers capable of launching Tomahawk cruise missiles in the
region, with one just 300 miles (some 480km) from the North Korean
nuclear test site. American long-range bombers have also been
positioned in Guam to hit North Korean targets.
North
Korea warned on Tuesday it would retaliate “if
the US dares opt for a military action” or
any other type of aggression with all means available.
The
North Korean General Staff said in a statement carried by the
country’s KCNA news agency that US deployment of “huge
nuclear strategic
assets” to the Korean Peninsula is pushing the region to “a
dangerous situation in which a thermo-nuclear war may break out any
moment.”
On
Monday, the country’s envoy to the UN echoed that statement, also
warning of a nuclear war that may follow America’s military
buildup. He stressed that Pyongyang will not back down to
Washington’s threats and continue its missile tests whenever its
suits the country since they represent part of a defensive strategy.
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