Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

North Korea warns South on U.S. jets

Regime threatens special-weapons tests

- HYUNG-JIN KIM

SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea slammed South Korea over its ongoing deployment of high-tech U.S. fighter jets, warning Thursday that it will respond by developing and testing unspecifie­d special weapons of its own to “destroy” the aircraft.

The statement, which also urged South Korea to abandon its “prepostero­us illusions” for improved ties, comes as Seoul has expressed hopes that a recent summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will help revive dialogue between the Koreas.

Under its biggest-ever weapons purchase, South Korea is to buy 40 F-35 fighter jets from Lockheed Martin by 2021. The first two arrived in March and two others are to be delivered in coming weeks, according to Seoul officials.

The project was announced in 2014 to cope with then-rising military threats from North Korea, which was conducting an unusually large number of weapons tests. Animositie­s have gradually eased since last year when Pyongyang and Washington started nuclear negotiatio­ns, but Seoul has been moving ahead with its already-approved F-35 procuremen­t.

On Thursday, the North’s Foreign Ministry fired off fresh criticism, claiming the second batch of F-35s is arriving in South Korea in mid-July, something that Seoul officials won’t confirm.

An unidentifi­ed policy research director at the ministry’s Institutes for American Studies said Seoul’s purchase of the U.S. jets was meant to “please the United States, their master, like eating mustard in tears,” though Seoul knows well the project is an “extremely dangerous action” that will increase military tensions.

The director said North Korea has “no other choice but to develop and test the special armaments to completely destroy the lethal weapons reinforced in South Korea.”

The South Korean government didn’t immediatel­y respond to the North’s statement. But arms-procuremen­t officials said the F-35 project would proceed as scheduled and that about 10 of the 40 jets were to be delivered by the end of this year.

Despite the warning, it’s unclear if North Korea can conduct a major weapons test any time soon because that would likely disrupt a positive atmosphere after the June 30 summit between Trump and Kim at the Korean border village of Panmunjom.

Though it lacked substance, the impromptu meeting was the first between Trump and Kim since their second summit in Vietnam in February collapsed without any agreement because of disagreeme­nt over U.S.-led sanctions on the North, and the two leaders agreed to resume working-level nuclear talks.

The latest statement didn’t criticize the U.S. directly. It was seen as more of a continuati­on of North Korea’s sensitivit­y to the introducti­on of sophistica­ted U.S. weapons on the Korean Peninsula and dissatisfa­ction with Seoul since the Vietnam summit’s breakdown.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who favors a negotiated resolution of the nuclear crisis, shuttled between Washington and Pyongyang last year to facilitate a flurry of diplomacy between the countries. He met Kim three times last year.

But since the Vietnam summit, North Korea has significan­tly reduced diplomatic activity and exchanges with South Korea and demanded that Seoul break away from Washington and resume inter-Korean economic projects held back by U.S.-led sanctions against the North. It recently urged Seoul to stop mediating between North Korea and the United States, though Kim joined a brief three-way encounter with Moon and Trump before he and the U.S. president went into a bilateral meeting at Panmunjom.

Since starting talks with Washington, Kim has suspended nuclear and longrange missile tests.

Kim Dong-yub, an analyst from Seoul’s Institute for Far Eastern Studies, said Thursday’s statement suggests that North Korea may perform an anti-air-missile test, but not a ballistic one that is banned by U.N. Security Council resolution­s.

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