North Korea said Thursday it is finalizing a plan to launch a salvo of four ballistic missiles off the shores of the U.S. territory of Guam, the newest provocation in the war of words between Pyongyang and Washington.
The reclusive communist state, in an unusually detailed announcement, said that within a week North Korean leader Kim Jong Un would be handed a plan to fire the Hwasong-12 missiles over Japan into the waters off Guam 3,300 kilometers to the south. State media said the missiles would land 30 to 40 kilometers off the shores of Guam, where 163,000 people live and the U.S. has 7,000 military personnel at a naval installation and an air base.
General Kim Rak Gyom, the commander of the North’s strategic rocket forces, told the state-run KCNA news agency that after the plan is given to Kim, the military would “wait for his order.”
Washington has sent mixed signals to the world this week in its effort to thwart North Korea’s nuclear weapons development in the aftermath of the new round of sanctions unanimously approved last weekend by the United Nations Security Council.
‘Fire and fury’
President Donald Trump vowed to attack North Korea, if it starts a war, with a “fire and fury like the world has never seen,” and Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Pyongyang risks annihilation with military action. But Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said, “I think Americans should sleep well at night and have no concerns about this particular rhetoric of the last few days.”
General Kim said that “sound dialogue” is not possible with Trump, calling him a man “bereft of reason” and that “only absolute force can work on him.” He described Trump’s “fire and fury” threat as “a load of nonsense.”
If North Korea carries out the missile launch aimed toward Guam, the U.S. could attempt to shoot down the missiles. It has six Aegis ballistic missile defense ships in the region capable of targeting North Korean missiles, but if Pyongyang were to launch the four missiles simultaneously it could make it harder to shoot down all of them.
Firing the missiles over Japan would ratchet up North Korea’s military adventurism. Its test missiles in recent months, launched at a very high angle, have landed in waters off Japan, although within its economic zone.
If the North carries out its missile launch plan aimed near Guam, South Korea said it would draw a “stern and strong” response from Washington and Seoul.
Japan’s Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera told parliament that a North Korean missile attack on Guam would constitute a Japanese national emergency, saying it would imperil Japan’s existence as a nation.[xyz-ihs snippet=”Adsense-responsive”]The threats and counter-threats between Pyongyang and Washington have occurred this week in the days after the U.N. Security Council imposed new, more stringent sanctions on North Korea. The new penalties are intended to reduce Pyongyang’s income from exported goods and labor by at least $1 billion – one-third of its current annual earnings – in an effort to end its nuclear weapons development.
The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency concluded in the last month that North Korea has now miniaturized a nuclear warhead capable of being attached to an intercontinental missle. If Pyongyang does have such capability, it would make North Korea the world’s ninth full-fledged nuclear power.
U.S. Defense Secretary Mattis said North Korea “should cease any consideration of actions that would lead to the end of its regime and the destruction of its people.” He said North Korea “must choose to stop isolating itself and stand down its pursuit of nuclear weapons.”
In a statement, Mattis warned that the United States and its allies “now possess the most precise, rehearsed and robust defensive and offensive capabilities on earth.” He said any North Korean military operation “will continue to be grossly overmatched by ours and would lose any arms race or conflict it initiates.”
Mattis’s vow came hours after Trump declared in a Twitter comment that the U.S. nuclear arsenal “is now far stronger and more powerful than ever before.”
Source: VOA