North Korea threatens to launch ‘unimaginable’ strike on US
19
October, 2017
North
Korea has threatened to launch an “unimaginable” strike on the
United States as massive joint US-South Korean naval drills are
underway off the Korean Peninsula, involving colossal American
aircraft carrier the USS Ronald Reagan.
“The
US is running amok by introducing under our nose the targets we have
set as primary ones. The US should expect it would face [an]
unimaginable strike at an unimaginable time,” said a government
statement carried by the North's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on
Thursday.
What
Pyongyang referred to as the “primary” target is the 100,000-ton
nuclear powered aircraft carrier, which is patrolling some 160
kilometers to the east of the peninsula and launched almost 90 F-18
Super Hornet sorties from its deck.
The
military exercises, regarded by Pyongyang as highly provocative,
began on Monday and will run through October 26. They involve 40
warships deployed in a line stretching from the Yellow Sea west of
the peninsula into the Sea of Japan.
The
North has already denounced Seoul and Washington’s war games,
condemning the move as a “rehearsal for war.”
Washington’s
military maneuvers with its close ally, the South, come ahead of US
President Donald Trump's visit to Japan and South Korea scheduled to
start on November 5.
PressTV- Trump
depicted as ‘old lunatic’ in windblown flyers
Anti-Trump
propaganda leaflets, graphically depicting the US president as a “mad
dog” and an “old lunatic” have been blown from North Korea to
the South.
Trump
has taken a tough stance against Pyongyang, threatening to “totally
destroy” North Korea if necessary and calling North Korean leader
Kim Jong-un names. Kim has responded with threats, vowing to take the
“highest-level” measures against the US.
Meanwhile,
the South Korean military threatened that it would be quick to
totally destroy North Korea's front-line artillery systems in the
event of a war on the peninsula.
The
US and the North have been at loggerheads over Pyongyang’s weapons
and nuclear programs. However, tensions on the Korean Peninsula have
recently risen sharply following a series of weapons tests by
Pyongyang, including its sixth and most powerful nuclear test on
September 3 and two missiles launched over Japan. Back in July, the
North also claimed that it had fired two intercontinental ballistic
missiles.
North
Korea is under mounting international pressure over its missile and
military nuclear programs and has been subjected to an array of
sanctions by the United Nations. However, Pyongyang says it needs to
continue and develop the programs as a deterrent against hostility by
the US and its regional allies, including South Korea and Japan.
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