The Philippine Star

‘Frankenmis­sile’ to annihilate NoKor

-

SEOUL — Faced with North Korea’s escalating nuclear and missile threats, South Korea is seeking to develop a ballistic missile capable of carrying warheads powerful enough to destroy the communist regime’s undergroun­d military facilities and wartime commands, according to a report in the Korea Herald yesterday.

According to military sources familiar with the matter, the government is considerin­g a plan to build a new ground-to-ground ballistic missile called “Frankenmis­sile” that can reach the entire North Korea and load up to two tons of warheads.

The plan was disclosed a day after South Korea President Moon Jae-in and his US counterpar­t Donald Trump agreed to scrap limits on the payload of South Korean missiles.

Previously, South Korea was banned from fitting warheads weighing more than 500 kilos onto its ballistic missiles with a range of 800 kilometers.

”It is crucial to come up with powerful and practical measures that can make North Korea realize (the impact of its actions),” Moon was quoted as saying by the presidenti­al Blue House Cheong Wa Dae during a phone conversati­on with Trump on Monday.

The Korean Herald reported that such moves came as part of efforts to enhance South Korea’ deterrence against North Korea, which is believed to have the capability to equip its short- and medium-range missiles with nuclear warheads and has demonstrat­ed the capability through a series of nuclear tests, including one on Sunday.

Under the bilateral missile guideline revised in 2012, South Korea is able to field ballistic missiles with a range of up to 800 kilometers, putting the entire North Korean territory in its range. But its effectiven­ess has been questioned because Seoul is banned from employing warheads weighing more than 500 kilos.

If South Korea had been allowed to develop a new missile with a payload of more than two tons, it would have possessed by now its own tool to take out North Korea’s undergroun­d military facilities other than the ones employed by the US military, such as the Bunker Buster Bomb, analysts noted.

”The measure would dramatical­ly boost South Korea’s retaliatio­n capability against North Korea,” said professor Kwon Yong Soo at Korea National Defense University.

“With a one-ton warhead ballistic missile, South Korea could target almost all of North Korea’s undergroun­d facilities.”

In an effort to beef up its military response to North Korea’s fast-advancing weapons program, South Korea is rushing to establish a special brigade tasked with eliminatin­g North Korea’s leadership.

The unit, set to launch on Dec.1, is expected to work alongside US special warfare units, such as SEAL Team Six, which engaged in the mission to kill Osama Bin Laden.

”We are in the process of conceptual­izing the plan,” said Defense Minister Song Young Moo on Monday, responding to lawmakers’ questions on whether the military could conduct a “decapitati­on strike” against North Korea’s leadership.

 ??  ?? South Korean troops fire a Hyunmoo missile during a military exercise at an undisclose­d location on Monday. REUTERS
South Korean troops fire a Hyunmoo missile during a military exercise at an undisclose­d location on Monday. REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines