Tensions rise as U.S. moves missile interceptor batteries to Guam

U.S. aggression would be “smashed by... cutting-edge smaller, lighter and diversified nuclear strike means: North Korea

December 18, 2013 02:29 am | Updated 08:56 pm IST - WASHINGTON:

The probability of a nuclear exchange between North Korea and other nations including the U.S. inched upwards this week as Pyongyang put out a statement that “The moment of explosion is approaching fast,” and that U.S. aggression would be “smashed by... cutting-edge smaller, lighter and diversified nuclear strike means.”

The remarks raising tensions in the Korean peninsula came shortly after the Pentagon announced that it would be mobilising ground-based THAAD missile-interceptor batteries to protect its military bases on Guam, a U.S. territory located 3,380 km southeast of North Korea and “home to 6,000 American military personnel, submarines and bombers.” North Korea added that a war could break out “today or tomorrow.”

The THAAD system includes a truck-mounted launcher and interceptor missiles, reports pointed out, and the Pentagon argued that its deployment would “strengthen our regional defence posture against the North Korean regional ballistic missile threat.”

South Korea offered its assessment of the North’s positioning confirming that Pyongyang had moved a missile with “considerable range” to its east coast, but that that missile was “not capable of hitting the U.S. mainland.”

Caution

The North Korean military however cautioned that it had received “final approval for military action” against the U.S., particularly responding to what it called the “provocative U.S. use of nuclear-capable B-52 and B-2 stealth bombers in ongoing war games with South Korea.”

Even U.S. Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel declared that North Korea posed “a real and clear danger” to South Korea, Japan and America, reports quoting unnamed South Korean and U.S. intelligence sources suggested that the allegedly untested North Korean Musudan missile had a theoretical range of 3,000 km and this could put “all of South Korea and Japan within its reach.”

North Korea, meanwhile, held firm to its blockade of the South from the Kaesong factory park run, which both nations operate jointly. Some reports said that North Korea had given South Korean companies time “until 10th of April to pull out” of the area, although South Korea’s reunification ministry was said to have denied that such a deadline had been given.

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