Dayton Daily News

N. Korea may hold military parade on eve of Olympics

Show of force could be part of holiday honoring army.

- Choe Sang Hun ©2018 The New York Times

North SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA — Korea announced Tuesday that Feb. 8, the day before the Winter Olympics open in South Korea, will be a national holiday honoring its army, raising the possibilit­y that it will hold a large military parade in a show of force on the eve of the games.

In recent weeks, South Korean officials have observed signs that the North, which is sending athletes to the Olympics, might be preparing for such a parade in its capital, Pyongyang, including large gatherings of troops and vehicles.

The North’s official Korean Central News Agency said Tuesday that Feb. 8 would be commemorat­ed as the country’s new Army Building Day. That holiday had previously been observed on April 25, the date when the North’s founding leader, Kim Il Sung, was said to have founded a guerrilla unit in 1932 to resist Japanese colonial rule.

Though the North has long said that its regular army was founded on Feb. 8, 1948, until now it had treated that date as less significan­t than April 25. This Feb. 8 will mark 70 years since the army’s founding, a milestone anniversar­y of the kind that North Korea often observes with enormous military parades, featuring columns of goose-stepping soldiers, tanks and missiles.

Before the announceme­nt Tuesday, Paektu Cultural Exchange, an organizati­on that arranges North Korea tours, had been advertisin­g a trip to Pyongyang that it said could include watching a “rare military parade” on Feb. 8. “According to our contacts, it is highly probable that there will be a military parade on this day, however no one can guarantee these types of events until the morning of the possible parade date,” its brochure said.

Paektu Cultural Exchange, which says it is a nonprofit social enterprise, is run by Michael Spavor, a Canadian who has long-running business ties in North Korea. He is one of the few foreigners to have met with Kim Jong Un since Kim became the North’s leader.

Pyongyang’s statement Tuesday did not mention a parade, but it said that the North would “significan­tly mark” the new Army Building Day with “diverse events” every year.

The South Korean Defense Ministry said Tuesday that it was closely monitoring signs that the North might be planning a parade.

If held, a military parade would be the North’s first since Kim claimed on New Year’s Day that the country had finished building a nuclear force, including missiles capable of reaching the mainland United States. Rolling out the country’s new interconti­nental ballistic missiles, or ICBMs, during a parade would keep the North’s nuclear threat in the spotlight amid the celebratio­ns surroundin­g the games, analysts said.

“It can keep its people from looking enviously at the Olympics in the South, rallying the loyalty of its people and officials by reminding them that although the North may lag behind the South economical­ly, it is ahead of South Korea militarily,” said Cheong Seong-chang, a senior analyst at the Sejong Institute in South Korea.

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