US
Air Force Sends DOS-Attacking Aircraft to Korean Peninsula
16
January, 2018
According
to reports Monday, the US' EC-130H Compass Call aircraft, which is
capable of issuing a denial of service attack an enemy plane's
communication abilities, was deployed to South Korea's Osan Air Force
Base January 4.
Though
it's unclear why the state-of-the-art tactical aircraft was deployed
to the base, some critics have speculated that it may be used
to collect data on North Korea's military during the
2018 Olympic Games set to begin February 9.
Per
the US Air Force, the Compass Call is a "tactical weapon system"
that can use "noise jamming to disrupt enemy command and
control communications and deny time-critical adversary coordination
essential for enemy force management."
Based
at Arizona's Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, the aircraft
reportedly made its way to South Korea after stopping
off at Japan's Yokota Air Base, KBS World Radio reported. There
are only 13 other EC-130Hs active in the US Air Force.
"If
we can shut down or deny their communication," Lt. Col.
Chris Weaton of the Electronic Combat Squadron said in a
statement, "then we are causing chaos."
This
chaos, Weaton says, gives US forces a chance to take advantage
of the scramble and carry out their own attacks. An
estimated four of the US' 13 EC-130Hs are operating in Iraq
and Syria, Business Insider reported.
US
Bombers, Warships Summoned to Korean Peninsula as Olympic Games
Approach
16
January, 2018
The
US military is bolstering its presence around the Korean Peninsula as
the Olympic Games draw closer.
One
new amphibious assault ship, an extra aircraft carrier and a slew of
stealth bombers were moved to the Indo-Pacific region in recent days
and weeks, Military.com reports. On January 11, a trio of
nuclear-capable B-2 Spirit bombers touched down at Andersen Air Force
Base, Guam. On January 14, the USS Wasp amphibious assault ship, a
type of American helicopter carrier that also carries Marine ground
forces, arrived at its new homeport of Sasebo, Japan, with a squadron
of F-35B joint strike fighters operated by the 31st Marine
Expeditionary Unit. The USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier is also en
route to the Western Pacific.
Amphibious
Assault Ship With First Squadron of F-35Bs Joins US 7th Fleet
The
deployments show that despite the agreement to postpone US-South
Korea military exercises until after the Winter Games, the Pentagon
has no plans of letting its guard down, Stars and Stripes notes.
The
same may not be true of the two Koreas, however. Last week, officials
from the two countries met for the first time in two years. The
meeting resulted in an agreement for North Korea to send its
largest-ever delegation to the Olympic games in Pyeongchang. South
Korea's government has said that officials from Seoul and Pyongyang
will meet again Wednesday at the demilitarized zone dividing the
Korean Peninsula.
A
newspaper run by North Korea's Workers' Party stated in a commentary
published over the weekend that the military maneuvers amounted to
"an unpardonable military provocation chilling the atmosphere
for improved inter-Korean relations."
"The
US imperialist warmongers would be well-advised to ponder over [the]
disastrous consequences to be entailed by their military provocations
against the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] possessed of
powerful nuclear deterrence," the Korean Workers' Party added.
Meanwhile,
the Pentagon has rejected the notion that the military movements are
aimed at any one country in particular. "You would be wrong to
view the bomber deployment within the single lens of what it means to
the Korean Peninsula. It affects allies across the Pacific," the
Defense Department's joint staff director, Lt. Gen. Kenneth McKenzie,
told reporters last Thursday.
When
asked whether the vessels and warships in the Western Pacific were
aimed at sending a message to Beijing, McKenzie remarked, "I
think when we move bombers across the globe, we send a signal to
everyone."
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