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North Korea War Threats Resume

North Korea South Korea

JEAN H. LEE   12/23/10 09:31 PM ET   AP

SEOUL, South Korea — One month after a deadly exchange of artillery fire, the two Koreas ramped up their rhetoric, with South Korea's president pledging unsparing retaliation if attacked again and a top North Korean official threatening a "sacred" nuclear war if provoked.

South Korean troops, tanks and fighter jets put on a thundering display of force Thursday as President Lee Myung-bak visited with soldiers at a base near the border, while North Korea's elite marked a key military anniversary by lashing out at the South for encouraging war.

For both countries, the rallying cries and military maneuvers mainly seemed designed to build support at home. But they raised fears anew of all-out war on a peninsula that New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson called a "tinderbox" after returning from a visit to the North Korean capital this week.

The two Koreas and their allies called a truce in 1953 to end three years of devastating war, but violence has flared up from time to time, most recently in the disputed waters off their west coast. North Korea does not recognize the maritime line drawn by U.N. forces, and the territorial dispute in the Yellow Sea has erupted into deadly naval skirmishes.

In March, a South Korean warship went down in the western waters, killing 46 sailors. And a month ago, South Korean live-fire drills in nearby waters triggered a North Korean artillery shower on Yeonpyeong Island that killed four South Koreans, the first attack on a civilian area since the Korean War.

Caught by surprise, Seoul since has beefed up its rules of engagement and has staged military drills, including joint exercises with U.S. troops, meant to remind the North of its superior firepower. The South even carried out provocative artillery drills from Yeonpyeong Island on Monday in a bold dare to the North to retaliate.

According to a report released Thursday by the International Crisis Group, the Koreas' disputed maritime boundary and the volatility of North Korea's internal politics have "created a serious risk that any further provocation might turn into a wider conflict."

While the North would lose in an all-out war against the South and its U.S. ally, "Seoul is constrained in retaliating forcefully because it has so much to lose" economically and politically, the report said. "Pyongyang, isolated from global markets and domestic political forces, does not face such constraints. Rather, the disparity permits it to provoke the South at very little cost, even while falling behind in the overall balance of conventional forces."

The drills continued Thursday, with tanks firing artillery and fighter jets dropping bombs at training grounds in Pocheon, some 20 miles (30 kilometers) from the North. The boom of cannons echoed throughout the valley and the hills erupted in smoke during the brief but dramatic exercise.

There was a theatrical quality to the exercises: Dozens of excited schoolchildren in bright yellow jackets were shuttled to the site to watch from bleachers as military music blared from loudspeakers.

President Lee met with troops manning a front-line army base in the east on the type of morale-boosting visit more commonly seen in the North. He vowed to retaliate if attacked again.

"I had thought that we could safeguard peace if we had patience, but that wasn't the case," he told the troops, according to his office. Any surprise attack will be met with an "unsparing" response, he warned.

After days of showing restraint, North Korea condemned the drills as a "grave military provocation." Defense chief Kim Yong Chun said North Korea was prepared to launch a "sacred war" and poised to use its nuclear capabilities to defend itself.

Kim said in Pyongyang that the military would deal "more devastating physical blows" if its rivals violate North Korean territory by even a millimeter. He also threatened to "wipe out" South Korea and the U.S. if they start a war, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.

North Korea is believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for at least a half-dozen atomic bombs, and also has revealed a uranium enrichment program that would give it a second way to make nuclear weapons.

After negotiating for years with its neighbors and the U.S. on dismantling its nuclear program in exchange for aid and concessions, Pyongyang walked away from the talks in 2009.

China, North Korea's only major ally and the impoverished nation's main benefactor, has pushed for a resumption of the disarmament talks as a vehicle for dialogue.

"The current situation remains highly complicated and sensitive," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters. "We appeal to the relevant parties to keep calm, exercise restraint, and adopt responsible attitudes and do more to ease the situation and safeguard peace and stability on the peninsula."

Richardson warned in an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday that violence could flare anew if the South continues its drills and the North abandons its stated intention of refraining from retaliation.

"The situation is still a tinderbox. There's still enormous tension, enormous mistrust and I believe diplomacy is what is needed to get us out of this tinderbox," he said in New Mexico after returning from a private trip to Pyongyang.

But he said the North Koreans "realize they went too far," and appear willing to reach out and change.

North Korea is driven not just by military zeal but also broader diplomatic, political and economic issues, according to a senior South Korean government official who spoke on condition of anonymity, citing government policy.

He said the succession movement in North Korea has added an extra layer of unpredictability to its behavior, with the leadership using provocations to build solidarity and loyalty at home.

Leader Kim Jong Il is believed to be grooming his young son Kim Jong Un to succeed him. The heir apparent made his formal political debut at a ruling Workers' Party convention in September.

"When Kim Jong Il's power transfer started in the 1970s and early 1980s, provocations were more frequent," the official said. "It is the same situation, but with (a) different person."

In recent days, North Korea has turned its attention to glorifying Kim Jong Il and his "songun," or "military-first," policy. A rare statement sent to the AP, apparently by the North Korean Embassy in Beijing, praised Kim's role as commander of the Korean People's Army.

"The traditional single-hearted unity of the Korean society in which all the people are united around their leader in one ideology, mind and purpose has entered a new, higher stage of development under Kim Jong Il's songun-based leadership," it said.

North Koreans will be marking Kim's appointment to supreme commander on Friday, a day that is also celebrated by many Christians in South Korea as Christmas Eve.

___

Associated Press writers Foster Klug in Pocheon, South Korea, Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul, Gillian Wong in Beijing and Susan Montoya Bryan in Santa Fe, New Mexico, contributed to this report.

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SEOUL, South Korea — One month after a deadly exchange of artillery fire, the two Koreas ramped up their rhetoric, with South Korea's president pledging unsparing retaliation if attacked again a...
SEOUL, South Korea — One month after a deadly exchange of artillery fire, the two Koreas ramped up their rhetoric, with South Korea's president pledging unsparing retaliation if attacked again a...
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04:35 AM on 01/03/2011
thats not the question you want to be asking, the question should be who will be in danger besides sk? i know our armed forces are strong but will we get attacked as well most likely yes! i just hope we dont have our back turned when something does happen!:(
12:12 AM on 12/26/2010
The bottomline question is who profits if war breaks out?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NonPrawf
You can't see, but I have a Predictor Badge too.
10:18 PM on 12/25/2010
Meh...the apocalypse was bound to happen sooner or later.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
02:00 PM on 12/25/2010
North Korea is the Pit Bull that running loose in the neighborhood, threaten to bite anyone whoever walk by. China has influence with North Korea, but refuse to act.
01:50 PM on 12/25/2010
i wonder how much of the North Korean military/infrastructure is underground. They must do something to offset our massive air firepower.
02:36 PM on 12/25/2010
Massive network of tunnels and bunkers and mobile missile launchers and artillery.
12:51 AM on 12/26/2010
See, that is what I am saying. I wonder how much of their army is underground and how far beneath South Korea they have penetrated. We may find out soon.
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DeathStare
01:12 PM on 12/25/2010
Since when has North Korea not felt threatened?
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Puller58
Man of Mystery
06:59 AM on 12/25/2010
Since when has North Korea not made threats?
11:36 PM on 12/24/2010
Sooner or later North Korea is going to be completely Destroyed ! Not a question of if but of when.
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Whinger
I'm Just Me!
03:59 PM on 12/24/2010
There's nothing sacred about an obscenity!
11:25 AM on 12/24/2010
This is great news. Our north korean ally is helping us to reign in the Japanese, and also help American cars to access south korean market. Without this ally, neither is possible.
04:59 AM on 12/24/2010
a mad dog can't quit foaming at the mouth kim jong-il needs to be put down.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
02:45 PM on 12/24/2010
I hate the idea of killing anyone, but you are right, this murderer has to go.
04:30 AM on 12/24/2010
Don't rock the boat!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
02:01 AM on 12/24/2010
Now it time to call for peace, before things get out of hand.
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muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
06:14 AM on 12/25/2010
wwoody agreed F&F....take a look at this short video. There is a certain group that literally screams for WAR....why? because it is good for their bottom line.
MR

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3_EXqJ8f-0
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wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
08:25 AM on 12/25/2010
Very interesting thank you for the 411. I fanned you long ago, I made you a favorite.
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merrymay
04:35 PM on 12/25/2010
MERRY, MERRY CHRISTMAS! AND A BLESSED NEW YEAR! To all of Muck-Raker's friends, from another one!
12:08 PM on 12/25/2010
Sorry to tell you this, but Kim Jong Il is a sociopath. There's no reasoning with him. Had it not been for China, he would have been punished long, long ago. And at the moment, even China is starting to grow weary of his antics.
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wwoody
Retired fishing for the truth.
12:42 PM on 12/25/2010
You're right Kim is a sociopath. fanned and favorite
10:57 PM on 12/23/2010
What exactly is sacred about frying countless thousands of innocents. As a race, we've not quite gotten there yet.
11:56 PM on 12/23/2010
I think its one of those things that are lost in translation.
10:48 PM on 12/23/2010
Time for barak to save the day and go apologize
12:31 AM on 12/24/2010
bow.