Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

North Korea parades missiles, then tests one that explodes

Display of long-range capabiliti­es tests U.S. with tension soaring

- By Tim Sullivan

PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korea paraded its interconti­nental ballistic missiles in a massive military display in central Pyongyang on Saturday, with ruler Kim Jong Un looking on with delight as his nation flaunted its increasing­ly sophistica­ted military hardware amid rising regional tensions.

Kim did not speak during the annual parade, which celebrates the 1912 birthday of his late grandfathe­r Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s founding ruler, but a top official warned that the North would stand up to any threat posed by the United States.

Choe Ryong Hae said President Donald Trump was guilty of “creating a war situation” on the Korean peninsula by dispatchin­g U.S. forces to the region.

“We will respond to an all-out war with an all-out war and a nuclear war with our style of a nuclear attack,” said Choe, widely seen by analysts as North Korea’s No. 2 official.

The parade, the annual highlight of North Korea’s most important holiday, came amid growing internatio­nal worries that North Korea may be preparing for its sixth nuclear test or a major missile launch, such as its first flight test of an ICBM capable of reaching U.S. shores.

But if the parade signaled a readiness for war, North Korea has long insisted that its goal is peace — and survival — with the growing arsenal a way to ensure that the government in Pyongyang is not easily overthrown.

North Korea saw the toppling of Saddam Hussein in Iraq and Moammar Gadhafi in Libya — neither of whom had nuclear weapons — as proof of the weapons’ power.

“It will be the largest of miscalcula­tions if the United States treats us like Iraq and Libya, which are living out miserable fates as victims of aggression, and Syria, which didn’t respond immediatel­y even after it was attacked,” said a Friday statement by the general staff of the North Korean army, according to the official Korean Central News Agency.

Also Friday, North Korea’s vice foreign minister told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview that Trump’s tweets — he recently tweeted, for example, that the North is “looking for trouble” — have inflamed tensions.

“Trump is always making provocatio­ns with his aggressive words,” Han Song Ryol said.

U.S. retaliator­y strikes earlier this month against Syria over a chemical weapons attack on civilians, coupled with Trump’s dispatchin­g of what he called an “armada” of ships to the region, touched off fears in South Korea that the United States was preparing for military action against the North.

Pyongyang has also expressed anger over the ongoing annual spring military exercises the U.S. holds with South Korea, which it considers a rehearsal for invasion.

 ?? Wong Maye-E The Associated Press ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves during a military parade Saturday in the capital city of Pyongyang to celebrate the 105th birth anniversar­y of Kim Il Sung, the country’s late founder and grandfathe­r of current ruler Kim Jong Un.
Wong Maye-E The Associated Press North Korean leader Kim Jong Un waves during a military parade Saturday in the capital city of Pyongyang to celebrate the 105th birth anniversar­y of Kim Il Sung, the country’s late founder and grandfathe­r of current ruler Kim Jong Un.

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