BusinessMirror

US to increase advanced weapons deployment to counter North Korea

- By Kim Tong-hyung

SEOUL, South Korea—us Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Tuesday said the United States will increase its deployment of advanced weapons such as fighter jets and bombers to the Korean Peninsula as it strengthen­s joint training and operationa­l planning with South Korea in response to a growing North Korean nuclear threat.

Austin made the comments in Seoul after he and South Korean Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup agreed to further expand their combined military exercises, including a resumption of live-fire demonstrat­ions, and continue a “timely and coordinate­d” deployment of US strategic assets to the region, according to their offices.

Austin and Lee also discussed preparatio­ns for a simulated exercise between the allies in February aimed at sharpening their response if North Korea uses nuclear weapons.

Austin’s trip comes as South Korea seeks stronger assurances that the United States will swiftly and decisively use its nuclear capabiliti­es to protect its ally in face of a North Korean nuclear attack.

South Korea’s security jitters have risen since North Korea test-fired dozens of missiles in 2022, including potentiall­y nuclear-capable ones designed to strike targets in South Korea and the US mainland.

South Korea and the United States have also been strengthen­ing their security cooperatio­n with Japan, which has included trilateral missile defense and anti-submarine warfare exercises in past months amid the provocativ­e run in North Korean weapons tests.

In a joint news conference following their meeting, Austin and Lee said they agreed that their countries’ resumption of large-scale military drills last year, including an aerial exercise involving US strategic bombers in November, effectivel­y demonstrat­ed their combined capabiliti­es to deter North Korean aggression.

The allies had downsized their training in recent years to create room for diplomacy with North Korea during the Trump administra­tion and because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We deployed fifth-generation aircraft, F-22s and F-35s, we deployed a carrier strike group to visit the peninsula, you can look for more of that kind of activity going forward,” Austin said.

He said the US commitment to protecting its allies with its full range of military capabiliti­es, including nuclear ones, remains “ironclad.”

North Korea’s ramped-up missile tests have been punctuated by threats to preemptive­ly use its nuclear weapons in a broad range of scenarios in which it perceives its leadership to be under threat, including convention­al clashes or non-war situations.

Tensions could further rise in coming months with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un doubling down on his nuclear ambitions.

During a political conference in December, Kim called for an“exponentia­l increase” in nuclear warheads, mass production of battlefiel­d tactical nuclear weapons targeting South Korea, and developmen­t of more powerful long-range missiles designed to reach the US mainland.

Experts say Kim’s nuclear push is aimed at forcing the United States to accept the idea of North Korea as a nuclear power and negotiatin­g badly needed economic concession­s from a position of strength.

Nuclear negotiatio­ns between the US and North Korea have been derailed since 2019 because of disagreeme­nts over a relaxation of Us-led economic sanctions against the North in exchange for steps by North Korea to wind down its nuclear weapons and missiles programs.

North Korea’s growing nuclear arsenal and provocatio­ns have raised the urgency for South Korea and Japan to strengthen their defense postures in line with their alliances with the United States.

In an interview with The Associated Press this month, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said his government was discussing with the Biden administra­tion joint military planning potentiall­y involving US nuclear assets.

In December, Japan made a major break from its strictly self-defense-only post-world War II principle, adopting a new national security strategy that includes the goals of acquiring preemptive strike capabiliti­es and cruise missiles to counter growing threats from North Korea, China and Russia.

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