Mercury (Hobart)

Live drill lifts tension

North warns of nuclear war after US-South Korean show of force

- Pyongyang

NORTH Korea yesterday lashed out at a live-fire drill the US and South Korea staged in a show of force against Pyongyang, accusing Washington of pushing the peninsula to the “tipping point” of nuclear war.

The allies held the rare livefire drill as tensions grew over the peninsula following the North’s first interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) test held last week. The test sparked global alarm as it suggested North Korea now possessed an ICBM capable of reaching Alaska, a major milestone for the reclusive, nuclear-armed state.

Saturday’s drill, designed to “sternly respond” to potential missile launches by the North, saw two US bombers destroy “enemy” missile batteries and South Korean jets mount precision strikes against under- ground command posts. The North’s state-run Rodong newspaper accused Washington and Seoul of ratcheting up tensions with the drill, in an editorial titled “Don’t play with fire on a powder keg.”

“The US, with its dangerous military provocatio­n, is pushing the risk of a nuclear war on the peninsula to a tipping point,” it said, describing the peninsula as the “world’s biggest tinderbox.” During Satur- day’s drill, long-range B-1B Lancer bombers reportedly flew close to the heavily-fortified border between two Koreas and dropped 2000-pound (900kg) bombs.

Pyongyang described the joint drill as a “dangerous military gambit of warmongers who are trying to ignite the fuse of a nuclear war on the peninsula.”

“A small misjudgmen­t or error can immediatel­y lead to the beginning of a nuclear war, which will inevitably lead to another world war,” it said.

Tension has been high as the US administra­tion under President Donald Trump and the North’s regime under leader Kim Jong-Un have exchanged hostile rhetoric for months. Tension escalated after Tuesday’s ICBM test, a milestone in the North’s decades-long quest for weapons capable of reaching the US.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia