Chicago Sun-Times

Trump’s options ‘ locked and loaded’

Pentagon has had ‘ worst case’ plans in place since Korean War armistice

- JimMichael­s @ jimmichael­s

President Trump tweeted Friday that U. S. military plans are “locked and loaded” and ready to go “should North Korea act unwisely.”

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un “will truly regret it, and he will regret it fast,” Trump told reporters later.

In fact, the Pentagon has had detailed plans in place for another conflict since the Korean War ended in 1953.

“The military has planned for the worst case for decades,” said David Maxwell, associate director of Georgetown University’s Center for Security Studies and a retired Army colonel who served five tours in South Korea.

Though the Pentagon never reveals its plans and the updates it has made over 64 years, analysts said there are several broad options: PRE- EMPTIVE STRIKE The United States might try to destroy North Korea’s nuclear weapons and missiles in a first strike, but that could easily escalate into a ground, air and sea war that would lead to tens of thousands of casualties, even millions if nuclear weapons were used.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said a war on the Korean Peninsula would be “catastroph­ic,” which is why the focus remains on diplomacy to curb North Korea’s nuclear and missile developmen­t programs.

Mark Milley, the Army chief of staff, said the U. S. and South Korean military would “utterly destroy the North Korean military, but that would be done at high cost in terms of human life, in terms of infrastruc­ture.” LIMITED STRIKE If the U. S. military were to strike first, it might target North Korea’s missile sites and nuclear processing plants.

The problem is that U. S. intelligen­ce agencies may not know where all of them are, and some may be in hardened bunkers that might be impregnabl­e, Maxwell said.

That could leave North Korea with nuclear weapons it could fire at South Korea or another U. S. ally in the region, such as Japan.

The United States might attempt a more limited strike on railroad lines or ports, said Dean Cheng, an analyst at the Heritage Foundation.

Another limited option would be a cyber strike that could take down the country’s power grid. TARGET ARTILLERY, ROCKETS North Korea could devastate Seoul, South Korea’s bustling capital, with convention­al artillery and rockets fired from just north of the Demilitari­zed Zone separating the two countries. The city and surroundin­g area have a population of 25 million.

The United States and its South Korean allies would try to destroy those convention­al weapons as soon as it became clear Seoul might be threatened. That would probably require U. S. and South Korean aircraft in addition to cruise missiles fired from American naval ships. North Korean aircraft and pilots would be no match for American equipment and pilots, Maxwell said. GROUND WAR Any large conflict on the Korean Peninsula would draw in ground forces. The peninsula is a formidable place to fight, including mountains, dense woods and cities. Winters can be brutally cold in the mountains.

The United States has about 28,000 service members based in South Korea and could deploy thousands more.

The bulk of the ground force would be South Korean, Maxwell said. The South Koreans have a military of about 650,000 troops and can mobilize a total force of more than 1million.

They are better trained and equipped than the larger North Korean military, which has 1.2 million in its active force.

Millions of civilians would be at risk. NAVAL BLOCKADE U. S. ships might participat­e in a blockade of North Korea to further isolate the country in event of war and prevent it from importing weapons and supplies.

A blockade might anger China, North Korea’s closest ally and largest trading partner by far.

During the Korean War in 1950- 53, China entered on the side of North Korea, helping to push back U. S. and South Korean forces.

It’s not clear whether China would get involved in the fighting this time. China prefers to avoid a war in the peninsula and would be reluctant to help North Korea unless the communist government in Beijing thought its own borders were threatened.

“I suspect they are cursing not only Donald Trump but Kim Jong Un, too,” Cheng said. NUCLEAR WAR “The U. S. is very anxious to avoid the first use of nuclear weapons,” said Bruce Bennett, an analyst at RAND Corp.

But if North Korea were to attack a regional ally with a nuclear weapon, Trump could order a retaliator­y nuclear strike without prior approval from Congress.

 ?? KIM CHUL SOO, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY ?? South Korean military police stand guard at the Military Demarcatio­n Line near the Demilitari­zed Zone in South Korea.
KIM CHUL SOO, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY South Korean military police stand guard at the Military Demarcatio­n Line near the Demilitari­zed Zone in South Korea.

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