Kuwait Times

Missile tests put N Korea on Trump’s front burner

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President Donald Trump is facing his biggest foreign policy challenge yet after North Korea fired a ballistic missile salvo in a supposed training run for an attack on US bases in Japan. Pyongyang blasted at least four missiles across the ocean toward its eastern neighbor on Monday, and three of the rockets splashed down into waters within Japan’s Exclusive Economic Zone.

The latest tests mark the end of what had been a quiet spell in North Korean weapons testing-with little activity since Trump’s election in November-and propels the long-simmering issue to the White House front burner. Trump in January had tweeted that North Korea’s stated goal of building a long-range nuclear missile to hit the US mainland “won’t happen”-but he never provided details.

After North Korea said the missile launches were training for a strike on US bases in Japan, where about 50,000 American troops are stationed, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Trump spoke by phone and warned the threat from North Korea had “entered a new stage.” Trump must now define what exactly that means, and what America’s response will be.

“We are in a very tenuous situation with not a lot of leverage, not a lot of initiative in terms of negotiatio­ns,” a senior defense official told reporters recently. “So as you might imagine we are preparing for contingenc­y operations to the degree we need to,” the official said. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is traveling to South Korea, Japan and China next week, his first visit to the region. He will discuss “strategic coordinati­on to address the advancing nuclear and missile threat from North Korea,” State Department acting spokesman Mark Toner said. “Given North Korea’s continuing provocativ­e behavior and actions, the US is actively engaged with its partners and allies in the region to address the threat posed,” he added.

Anti-missile technologi­es

Further ramping up regional tensions is the deployment of an American anti-ballistic missile battery called THAAD, a successor to the Patriot system. China is furious about the move, even though the intercepto­rs can only be used for defense and cannot directly engage Chinese missiles. Beijing worries THAAD’s radar system will give the United States precision tracking capabiliti­es of China’s own missiles, and weaken its deterrence against America.

“This is somewhat exaggerate­d as a threat but the full capabiliti­es of the THAAD system are classified so it can’t be entirely discounted,” said John Schilling, an aerospace expert and consultant at the 38 North program of the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University. Experts say Pyongyang’s simultaneo­us firing of at least four missiles is possibly an attempt to overcome anti-missile systems by overwhelmi­ng them.

The Patriot system could supposedly stop up to 16 missiles at a time, and THAAD is thought to only build on that number. But trying to stop a missile with another missile is far from infallible. North Korea analyst Joseph Bermudez said Pyongyang potentiall­y has enough mobile launchers to fire at least 36 ballistic missiles of various types at the same time. Monday’s missiles were either enhanced extended-range Scuds or medium-range No Dong ballistic missiles that date back to the 1990s and can’t reach mainland America.

Fresh start

Privately, the North Koreans had been sending signals they wanted a fresh start with the Trump administra­tion, said Joel Wit, a cofounder of the 38 North program. But the start of US military drills with Seoul this week ended that chapter. “That posture wouldn’t last forever and the US-(South Korea) joint exercises that are taking place now were signaled as possibly ending that quiet period,” Wit said. — AFP

 ??  ?? SEHNYANG: This photo taken on March 6, 2017 shows a Chinese visitor posing for photos next to a wax figure of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un. — AFP
SEHNYANG: This photo taken on March 6, 2017 shows a Chinese visitor posing for photos next to a wax figure of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un. — AFP

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