Slatest PM: North Korea's Threats and What the U.S. Is Doing About Them
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Posted
Wednesday, April 3, 2013, at 4:51 PM
South Korean anti-aircraft armored vehicles move over a temporary
bridge during a river-crossing military drill in Hwacheon, near the
border with North Korea on April 1, 2013.
Photo by Kim Jae-Hwan/AFP/Getty Images
Just When It Looked Like They Were Out of Threats: Reuters: "North
Korea said it had 'ratified' a merciless attack against the United
States, potentially involving a 'diversified nuclear strike.' "
The Statement: "We formally inform the White House
and Pentagon that the ever-escalating U.S. hostile policy toward the
DPRK and its reckless nuclear threat will be smashed by the strong will
of all the united service personnel and people and cutting-edge smaller,
lighter and diversified nuclear strike means of the DPRK and that the
merciless operation of its revolutionary armed forces in this regard has
been finally examined and ratified," a spokesman for the North Korean
military said in a statement carried by state media.
Not Something to Laugh Off: NBC News:
"Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Wednesday that North Korea's latest
provocations are 'a real and clear danger and threat' to U.S. interests
and Washington is taking them seriously. 'We are doing everything we
can ... to defuse that situation on the peninsula,' Hagel said after a
speech at the National Defense University at Fort McNair."
What We're Going to Do About It: Washington Post:
"The United States will deploy a sophisticated anti-missile defense
system to Guam in response to North Korean threats to U.S. military
bases in the Pacific, the Pentagon said Wednesday. The Terminal High
Altitude Area Defense system (THAAD) is a relatively new land-based
system designed to destroy incoming short, medium and intermediate-range
missiles by crashing into them in the air. Only two batteries of the
system, produced by Lockheed Martin, are currently deployed, both at
Fort Bliss, Tex. ... The announcement followed North Korea’s banning of
South Korean workers from entering a joint industrial complex near the
demilitarized zone. Obama administration officials had said earlier that
the move would signal a more serious crisis beyond the bellicose
rhetoric issued by North Korea over the past several weeks."
More on the Industrial Complex: New York Times:
"North Korea blocked South Koreans on Wednesday from crossing the
heavily armed border to a jointly operated industrial park, raising
doubt about the future of the last remaining major symbol of
inter-Korean cooperation. ... The move came four days after North Korea
threatened to shut down the industrial park ... out of anger over United
Nations sanctions and joint military drills that the United States and
South Korea are conducting on the Korean Peninsula. ... Officials feared
that if the one-way blockade continued, it would asphyxiate the
eight-year-old industrial park, which produced $470 million worth of
goods last year, helping provide a badly needed source of cash for the
North, which faces heavy global sanctions."
Foreign Policy: The North Korea Deal That Wasn'tLabels: Defence, Munitions, North Korea, Nuclear Technology, Threats, United States
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