Irish Independent

North Korean weapons test is a shot across bow of Trump

- Julian Ryall

THE test-firing of an “ultramoder­n tactical weapon” by the North Korean military sends messages to both domestic and internatio­nal audiences, with the presence of Kim Jong-un at Friday’s exercises underlinin­g Pyongyang’s resolve to stand up to Washington. North Korean state media reported that the North Korean leader “supervised” a test of a weapon that is “a decisive turn in the fighting capacity of the Korean People’s Army”.

The South Korean government believes the new weapon to be a long-range artillery piece – possibly a mobile launcher for convention­al rockets with an advanced guidance system – that has been in developmen­t since the rule of Kim Jong-il, who died in 2011.

“There have been reports in recent years that the North was developing long-range artillery that would be able to hit the US garrison at Camp Humphreys or the air force base at Osan,” said Daniel Pinkston, professor of internatio­nal relations at the Seoul campus of Troy University. The two bases are critical to US forces’ ability to defend South Korea and both are about 100km from the Demilitari­sed Zone that divides the peninsula.

“It’s clear that they are still working on convention­al weapons systems, which is important to the North’s leadership and its view of the world that it needs a robust military capability,” he said. “The message this sends is aimed at an inter-Korean audience and China and says that Pyongyang remains resolute, that it refuses to be pushed around and that it will continue to exploit any benefits that it can find.”

The test will also have been aimed squarely at the US, believes James Brown, an associate professor who specialise­s in North Korean issues at the Tokyo campus of Temple University, who believes the process of scrapping the North’s nuclear weapons capabiliti­es in return for lifting sanctions has “become stuck”.

“The two sides each feel that the other needs to do more,” he said. “The US says the North must take more steps on its nuclear programmes and has threatened to restart largescale military exercises if that does not happen.

“The North Koreans think they have done enough and that it is time for the US to ease some of the sanctions, and their threat is that they will go back to carrying out nuclear tests again,”hesaid.

The test of a convention­al weapons system – albeit a potent one – is significan­t on a political level more than on an operationa­l level, Mr Brown said, with Mr Kim’s presence elevating the importance of the test even further.

Donald Trump appears to be in no mood to grant concession­s. The US perceives North Korea as dragging its feet on coming clean on its nuclear capabiliti­es and busy soliciting help from other nations – notably China and Russia – to support its calls for sanctions to be lifted.

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