The Borneo Post

Old playbook behind NKorea’s new nuke test

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SEOUL: The path to Pyongyang’s latest nuclear test followed a textbook North Korean strategy: escalating provocatio­ns accompanie­d by furious denunciati­ons of annual South Korea-US military exercises.

In the 12 days since Washington praised Pyongyang’s ‘ restraint’ and held out the prospect of early talks, the North has fired three short-range missiles, sent another one soaring over Japan and detonated what appears to be a full-fledged thermonucl­ear device.

“The hydrogen bomb test was a perfect success,” an announcer on state TV claimed after yesterday’s test.

While some western media delight in portraying the North Korean regime as irrational – or even unbalanced – experts say it demonstrat­es an extremely refined ability in calibratin­g and timing its actions to maximise their impact.

The fuse for yesterday’s detonation was lit with the test in July of two interconti­nental ballistic missiles ( ICBM) that appeared to bring much of the US within range.

That sparked a fierce warning by President Donald Trump that Washington could rain ‘fire and fury’ on the North, while Pyongyang unveiled a plan to fire a salvo of missiles towards the US territory of Guam.

North Korean leader Kim JongUn later said he was putting the plan on hold, but warned he could still give the order depending on Washington’s next move.

The final countdown then began on Aug 21 when the United States and South Korea kicked off an annual military exercise called ‘Ulchi Freedom Guardian’ involving tens of thousands of troops. The North, which sees such war games as rehearsals for invasion, said the US would be ‘pouring gasoline on fire’ by going ahead with the drill.

Its initial military response came on August 26 with the relatively innocuous launch of three shortrange ballistic missiles.

That was followed three days later by the far more provocativ­e launch of an intermedia­te-range missile over Japan – a move that triggered consternat­ion in Tokyo and the wider region.

Yesterday’s H-bomb test was flagged just hours before by the release in the North’s state media of photos of Kim inspecting a ‘ thermonucl­ear weapon’ capable of being mounted on an ICBM.

More than 60 years after the end of the Korean War, the impoverish­ed North uses the perceived threat of US invasion to justify its nuclear weapons programme.

The annual military exercises in the South always lead to a sharp rise in tensions, and the North’s fifth nuclear test on September 9 last year also followed the annual war games.

China, under fire from Trump for failing to restrain its neighbour and ally, has pushed for a suspension of the North’s nuclear and missile tests in exchange for a halt to the drills – a quid pro quo firmly rejected by Seoul and Washington.

If the North’s playbook for the latest test is familiar, there is a wild card in the form of the new occupant of the White House.

While his advisers stress diplomacy, President Trump has repeatedly raised the option of military measures to shut down the North’s nuclear and missile programmes. — AFP

 ??  ?? South Korean officials watch television news channels showing Kim, at the Korea Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion in Seoul. — AFP photo
South Korean officials watch television news channels showing Kim, at the Korea Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion in Seoul. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? This file handout picture obtained from French space agency Centre national d’etudes spatiales (CNES - National Centre for Space Studies), Airbus Defence and Space and the 38 North analysis group, shows a satellite image of North Korea’s Punggye-ri...
This file handout picture obtained from French space agency Centre national d’etudes spatiales (CNES - National Centre for Space Studies), Airbus Defence and Space and the 38 North analysis group, shows a satellite image of North Korea’s Punggye-ri...
 ??  ?? Lee Mi-Seon, a director of the National Earthquake and Volcano Centre, shows a map of a North Korean location during a briefing about the ‘artificial earthquake’ in North Korea, at the Korea Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion in Seoul. — AFP photo
Lee Mi-Seon, a director of the National Earthquake and Volcano Centre, shows a map of a North Korean location during a briefing about the ‘artificial earthquake’ in North Korea, at the Korea Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion in Seoul. — AFP photo

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