18
September, 2017
WASHINGTON
– Defense Secretary Jim Mattis confirmed Monday that the U.S. and
South Korea have discussed employing tactical nuclear weapons as an
option to defend against North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.
The
acknowledgment from Mattis comes as the U.S. and international
community grapple with increasingly aggressive nuclear weapons
testing by North Korea.
In
the last few weeks, North Korea has tested an intercontinental
ballistic missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland and tested a
hydrogen bomb, according to U.S. Strategic Command’s assessment of
the program.
Last
Thursday, as Mattis was at STRATCOM assessing the U.S. nuclear
posture, North Korea fired another intermediate range missile over
Japan, sending millions of Japanese citizens into shelters.
On
Monday, Mattis said there are military options to use against North
Korea that would not result in mass casualties for Seoul, but he
would not go into specifics.
South
Korean Defense Minister Song Young-moo told his parliament he had
requested the U.S. consider the return of tactical nuclear weapons to
the Korean Peninsula during a U.S. visit with Mattis earlier this
month.
On
Monday, Mattis confirmed the exchange, but did not provide further
details.
“We
discussed the option,” Mattis told reporters at the Pentagon.
“We
have open dialogue with our allies on any issue they want to bring
up.”
However,
the risk of reintroducing the weapon to the peninsula could be grave,
said Air Force Gen. John Hyten, STRATCOM commander, who met with
reporters during Mattis’ visit.
“I
think it is actually a very dangerous term to use, because I think
every nuclear weapon that is employed is strategic,”
The
U.S. has around 500 B-61 low-yield, or “tactical” nuclear gravity
bombs ― some with yields as small as 0.3 kilotons in their arsenal,
said James McKeon, a nuclear weapons analyst for the Center for Arms
Control and Non-Proliferation.
However,
it’s not the size that determines their tactical or strategic
status, McKeon said. The bombs are tactical ― and not governed by
the 2010 new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START treaty ― if
they are delivered on a tactical aircraft, such as an F-16 or F-15
fighter jet, McKeon said.
The
weapons become strategic if delivered via on of the nation’s
strategic assets, such as the B-2 or B-52 nuclear-capable bombers.
Tactical
nuclear weapons were removed from the South Korean Peninsula in 1991
in a previous attempt to get North Korea to abandon its nuclear
weapons program.
To
Hyten, the weapons are the same regardless of delivery or yield,
because of the risk that North Korea would also choose to employ a
low-yield device and bring both nations into an escalated, nuclear
conflict.
“To
call it a tactical weapon brings into the possibility that there
could be a nuclear weapon employed on a battlefield for a tactical
effect,” Hyten said. “It’s not a tactical effect. If somebody
deploys what is a non-strategic nuclear weapon or a tactical nuclear
weapon, the United States will respond strategically, not tactically
because they have now crossed a line ― a line that hasn’t been
crossed since 1945.”
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