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Missile threat

North Korea’s Guam strike plan entails sending a salvo of four missiles over Japan and towards the US territory.

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N. Korea announces plan to fire salvo of four rockets over Japan towards the US territory of Guam.

Seoul: Nuclear-armed North Korea announced a detailed plan to send a salvo of four missiles over Japan and towards the US territory of Guam, raising the stakes in a stand-off with President Donald Trump and mocking him as “bereft of reason”.

The scheme to target the island, a key US military stronghold, was intended to “signal a crucial warning” as “only absolute force” would have an effect on the US leader, the North said.

The declaratio­n came after Trump boasted on Twitter that America’s nuclear arsenal was “far stronger and more powerful than ever before”.

Earlier, Trump stunned the world with a bold message to leader Kim Jong-Un that appeared to borrow from Pyongyang’s own rhetorical arsenal, saying the North faced “fire and fury like the world has never seen”.

The war of words over Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programmes is raising fears of a miscalcula­tion that could lead to catastroph­ic consequenc­es on the Korean peninsula and beyond.

Last month the North carried out two successful tests of an interconti­nental ballistic missile, bringing much of the US mainland within its range.

The region was facing “a mini Cuban Missile Crisis”, John Delury, professor at Seoul’s Yonsei University, said.

Trump’s “fire and fury” remarks were “a load of nonsense”, said General Kim Rak-Gyom, the com- mander of the North’s missile forces, according to Pyongyang’s official Korean Central News Agency.

“Sound dialogue is not possible with such a guy bereft of reason,” he added in a statement.

The military would complete the Guam plan by mid-August and submit it to Kim Jong-Un for considerat­ion, he said.

The distinctiv­ely precise statement said the four missiles would be launched simultaneo­usly and overfly the Japanese prefecture­s of Shimane, Hiroshima and Kochi.

They would have a flight time of 17 minutes 45 seconds, travel 3,356.7km and come down 30 to 40km away from Guam, it said – which would put the impact points just outside US territoria­l waters.

Japan, which has in the past warned it would shoot down any North Korean missiles that threaten its territory, responded that it could “never tolerate” provocatio­ns from the reclusive state.

The western Pacific island of Guam is home to US strategic assets including long-range bombers and military jets and submarines, which are regularly deployed for shows of force in and near the Korean peninsula, to Pyongyang’s fury.

Two supersonic US bombers took off from the island on a flyover mission to Korea early this week.

Professor Yang Moo-Jin of Seoul’s University of North Korean Studies said the level of detail in Pyongyang’s declaratio­n was unusual.

“The North appears to be saying what it is going to do is within internatio­nal laws,” he said. “Therefore, it cannot be ruled out that the North may translate this plan into reality.”

Delury added: “In a sense they are trying to ensure that the United States and South Korea, and Japan even, don’t mistake this for a real attack.”

During the Cold War in the 1980s the Soviet Union sent unarmed missiles to come down in the Pacific within 1,000km of Hawaii.

“Pyongyang’s interpreta­tion of rhetoric from Washington is different from the way the West regards the North’s habitual threats.

“It views such fiery rhetoric from Trump as a matter of life and death,” said Hong Hyun-Ik, a senior researcher with the Sejong Institute. — AFP

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