Chattanooga Times Free Press

S. Korea scrambles to improve weapons after N. Korean test

- BY KIM TONG-HYUNG

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean President Moon Jae-in took office four months ago with plans to reach out to North Korea in a way his conservati­ve predecesso­rs did not in the previous decade. Two ICBM launches and one nuclear test later, his government is ramping up its defenses, with some officials even considerin­g asking the United States to bring back tactical nuclear weapons a generation after their removal from the Korean Peninsula.

Seoul’s new interest in stronger weapons received a boost Tuesday when the Trump administra­tion agreed to remove previous restrictio­ns on South Korean missiles.

But South Korean hunger for military strength goes beyond just missiles. Government officials also endorse the nation getting nuclearpow­ered submarines. And Seoul’s defense minister said the idea of bringing back U.S. tactical nukes to South Korea should be “deeply considered” by the allies.

This shift right by the liberal Moon underscore­s deep unease the North’s expanding nuclear weapons arsenal will undermine the country’s decades-long alliance with the United States. Pyongyang may soon perfect an interconti­nental ballistic missile that can target the U.S. mainland.

Here are some of the military capabiliti­es South Korea is pursuing or may soon:

BALLISTIC MISSILES

South Korea says stronger missiles are crucial to the so-called “kill chain” pre-emptive strike capability it wants to use to target North Korea. A pre-emptive strike against Pyongyang’s leadership would be difficult to undertake, but it’s widely seen as the most realistic of the limited military options Seoul has to deny a nuclear attack from its rival.

In August, South Korea conducted the last scheduled flight test of a new missile with a range of 500 miles. It will soon join the “Hyunmoo” family of ballistic missiles that currently have a

maximum range of 310 miles.

While Seoul’s military says its missiles are currently capable of wiping out North Korean structures on land, it says heavier warheads are needed to target North Korea’s undergroun­d facilities and bunkers.

Following North Korea’s second test of an ICBM in July, Moon ordered his military to schedule talks with the United States to increase warhead weight limits on South Korea’s maximumran­ge missiles. Moon’s office didn’t announce any changes to the range limit Tuesday.

South Korean missile developmen­ts have been constraine­d by a bilateral guideline between the allies since the late 1970s, when Washington sought to check Seoul’s missile developmen­t under military dictator Park Chung-hee, a staunch anti-communist who ruled South Korea in the 1960s and ’70s. The restrictio­ns have been eased over the years.

NUCLEAR-POWERED SUBMARINES

Several South Korean government officials, including Prime Minster Lee Nak-yon, the country’s No. 2, have been calling for South Korea to acquire a nuclear-powered submarine. South Korea’s navy is planning a feasibilit­y study over getting such vessels, although some experts see the possibilit­y as low.

Supporters say such vessels are critical for coping with North Korea’s submarine-launched ballistic missile system because they can operate much longer than convention­al diesel-powered submarines without refueling. That gives

them a better chance to find and track North Korean subs, they argue.

In August last year, the North successful­ly test-fired for the first time a submarinel­aunched ballistic missile that flew about 310 miles. Such technology in the hands of North Korea is an alarming thought for South Korea and Japan because such weapons are harder to detect before launch.

If South Korea makes a real push for nuclearpow­ered subs, critics say it may never overcome political and technical hurdles. Washington may also balk at Seoul’s acquisitio­n of the enriched uranium needed to operate such submarines. Critics also argue Washington already provides its ally a nuclear umbrella of protection and can easily ship in assets to detect and contain North Korean submarines when needed.

TACTICAL NUKES

Experts say South Korea would have an even harder time persuading the United States to re-introduce tactical nukes to the Korean Peninsula. These were withdrawn in the 1990s.

Even so, that hasn’t stopped lawmakers from South Korea’s largest conservati­ve party from demanding the return of the weapons. Song Young-moo, Seoul’s defense minister, told lawmakers Monday that the allies should consider the issue.

South Koreans who support the return of U.S. tactical nukes often raise fears of rifts in the decades-old security alliance between Washington and Seoul because of North Korea’s expanding nuclear weapons program.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY SOUTH KOREA DEFENSE MINISTRY VIA AP ?? South Korea’s Hyunmoo II ballistic missile is fired during an exercise at an undisclose­d location in South Korea.
FILE PHOTO BY SOUTH KOREA DEFENSE MINISTRY VIA AP South Korea’s Hyunmoo II ballistic missile is fired during an exercise at an undisclose­d location in South Korea.

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