NORTH Korea has issued its latest belligerent threat,
warning of an indiscriminate “pre-emptive nuclear strike of justice” on
Washington and Seoul, this time in reaction to the start of huge U.S.-South
Korean military drills.
Such threats have been a staple of young North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un since he took power after his dictator father’s death in December
2011. But they spike especially when Washington and Seoul stage what they call
annual defensive springtime war games.
Pyongyang says the drills, which started Monday and run
through the end of April, are invasion rehearsals.
The North’s powerful National Defense Commission threatened
strikes against targets in the South, U.S. bases in the Pacific and the U.S.
mainland, saying its enemies “are working with bloodshot eyes to infringe upon
the dignity, sovereignty and vital rights” of North Korea.
If we push the buttons to annihilate the enemies even right
now, all bases of provocations will be reduced to seas in flames and ashes in a
moment,” the North’s statement said.
Responding to the North’s threat, South Korean Defense
Ministry spokesman Moon Sang Gyun said Monday that North Korea must refrain
from a “rash act that brings destruction upon itself.
This year’s war games will
be the largest ever staged, involving 300,000 South Korean and 17,000 U.S.
troops. South Korea’s Yonhap news agency, citing military sources, reported
that the allies will work on drills for precision attacks on North Korean
leadership and its nuclear and missile arsenal in the event of war.
A pre-emptive large-scale military strike that would end the
authoritarian rule of the Kim dynasty is highly unlikely. There is also
considerable outside debate about whether North Korea is even capable of the
kind of “strikes” it threatens.
The North makes progress with each new nuclear
test it staged its fourth in January but many experts say its arsenal may
consist only of still-crude nuclear bombs; there’s uncertainty about whether
they’ve mastered the miniaturization process needed to mount bombs on
long-range missiles and widespread doubt about whether they have a reliable
missile that could deliver such a bomb to the U.S. mainland.
But North Korea’s bellicose rhetoric raises unease in Seoul
and its U.S. ally, not least because of the huge number of troops and weaponry
facing off along the world’s most heavily armed border, which is an hour’s
drive from the South Korean capital of Seoul and its 10 million residents.
The rival Koreas’ usual animosity occasionally erupts in
bloody skirmishes 50 South Koreans were killed in attacks in 2010 that Seoul
blames on the North and there is always a worry about an escalation of
violence.
Always ragged relations between North Korea and its rivals
Seoul and Washington have worsened following North Korea’s nuclear test in
January and a long-range rocket test last month that outsiders say was a test
of banned ballistic missile technology.
The United Nations recently slapped the North with harsh
sanctions, and South Korea has taken a harder than usual line, with a new North
Korean human rights law and the president in Seoul warning of a collapsed
government in Pyongyang. South Korea says it will announce new unilateral
sanctions Tuesday.
Similar nuclear threats by the North were made in 2013,
around the time of the springtime military drills, after the U.N.
sanctioned the North over a nuclear test and long-range
rocket launch.
Analysts say one part of North Korea’s traditional anger
over the drills is that they force the impoverished country to respond with its
own costly war games.
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