Cape Times

Tensions rise after live-fire artillery drills by North Korea

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SEOUL: North Korea conducted large-scale live-fire artillery drills yesterday to mark its army anniversar­y, South Korea’s joint chiefs of staff said.

Pyongyang staged the large-scale exercises of firepower around the city of Wonsan on the east coast, they said.

The South Korean military was closely monitoring the North Korean moves as it maintains firm combat readiness, said the chiefs of staff.

Yesterday’s drills reportedly involved 300 to 400 long-range artillery guns.

The drills were observed by top leader Kim Jong Un.

North Korea has in the past tended to mark significan­t dates by displaying its military capabiliti­es.

On April 15, the country conducted a massive military parade in Pyongyang to mark the birthday of its founder Kim Il Sung, the grandfathe­r of Kim Jong Un.

The live-fire drills in North Korea yesterday came amid ongoing joint military exercises of South Korea and the US, which have been denounced by Pyongyang as a rehearsal for a northward invasion.

Amid heightened tensions on the Korean Peninsula, US President Donald Trump is pursuing a policy somewhat like his predecesso­r Barack Obama, albeit one that is more direct, US experts have said.

Trump has in recent days re-directed a US aircraft carrier strike group to the area in a bid to send a signal both to North Korea and to its allies in the region, after a recent missile test launch by the North and heightened rhetoric between the US and Pyongyang.

“Right now the Trump administra­tion seems to be following an ‘Obama-plus’ strategy,” Michael Auslin, the director of Japan Studies at the American Enterprise Institute, said. “(It has adopted the) same approach of reassuring allies, maintainin­g military assets in the region, but heightened rhetoric, more direct threats,” he said. “No real indication­s yet that they (the Trump administra­tion) are considerin­g a new round of negotiatio­ns. “But if they are, then having a harder line upfront, announcing the end of ‘strategic patience’ gives them a stronger starting hand,” said Auslin.

Still, there is a risk that Trump would draw a red line of his own regarding North Korea, Auslin said.

“And if he doesn’t act in some way, then the administra­tion’s credibilit­y may suffer.”

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a military parade in memory of his grandfathe­r Kim Il Sung in Pyongyang.
PICTURE: AP North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a military parade in memory of his grandfathe­r Kim Il Sung in Pyongyang.

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