Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

South Korea plans ‘decapitati­on unit’

- By Choe Sang-Hun

SEOUL, South Korea — The last time South Korea is known to have plotted to assassinat­e the North Korean leadership, nothing went as planned.

In the late 1960s, after North Korean commandos tried to ransack the presidenti­al palace in Seoul, South Korea secretly trained misfits plucked from prison or off the streets to sneak into North Korea and slit the throat of its leader, Kim Il Sung. When the mission was aborted, the men mutinied.

They killed their trainers and fought their way into Seoul before blowing themselves up, an episode the government concealed for decades.

Now, as Kim’s grandson, Kim Jong Un, accelerate­s his nuclear missile program, South Korea is again targeting the North’s leadership. A day after North Korea conducted its sixth — and by far most powerful — nuclear test this month, the South Korean defense minister, Song Young-moo, told lawmakers in Seoul that a special forces brigade defense officials described as a “decapitati­on unit” would be establishe­d by the end of the year.

The unit has not been assigned to literally decapitate North Korean leaders. But that is clearly the menacing message South Korea is trying to send.

Defense officials said the unit could conduct cross-border raids with retooled helicopter­s and transport planes that could penetrate North Korea at night.

Rarely does a government announce a strategy to assassinat­e a head of state, but South Korea wants to keep the North on edge and nervous about the consequenc­es of further developing its nuclear arsenal. At the same time, the South’s increasing­ly aggressive posture is meant to help push North Korea into accepting President Moon Jae-in’s offer of talks.

It is a difficult balancing act, pitting Moon’s preference for a diplomatic solution against his nation’s need to answer an existentia­l question: How can a country without nuclear weapons deter a dictator who has them?

“The best deterrence we can have, next to having our own nukes, is to make Kim Jong Un fear for his life,” said Shin Wonsik, a three-star general who was the South Korean military’s top operationa­l strategist before he retired in 2015.

The measures have also raised questions about whether South Korea and the United States, the South’s most important ally, are laying the groundwork to kill or incapacita­te Kim and his top aides before they can even order an attack.

While Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has said the United States was not seeking leadership change in North Korea, the South Koreans say the new military tactics are meant to offset the North Korean threat, the capabiliti­es they are building could be used pre-emptively.

Earlier this month, President Donald Trump agreed to lift payload limits under a decades-old treaty, allowing South Korea to build more powerful ballistic missiles. The U.S. helped South Korea build its first ballistic missiles in the 1970s, but in return, imposed restrictio­ns to try to prevent a regional arms race.

“We can now build ballistic missiles that can slam through deep undergroun­d bunkers where Kim Jong Un would be hiding,” Shin said. “The idea is how we can instill the kind of fear a nuclear weapon would — but do so without a nuke. In the medieval system like North Korea, Kim Jong Un’s life is as valuable as hundreds of thousands of ordinary people whose lives would be threatened in a nuclear attack.”

Although a majority of South Koreans, especially conservati­ve politician­s and commentato­rs, call for arming their country with nuclear weapons of its own, Moon has repeatedly vowed to rid the Korean Peninsula of such weapons. In June, Trump reiterated Washington’s nuclear-umbrella doctrine, promising to protect the South with “the full range of United States military capabiliti­es, both convention­al and nuclear.”

But after North Korea tested two interconti­nental ballistic missiles in July, including one that appeared capable of hitting the United States’ mainland, South Koreans are not so sure the United States would follow through.

“Would the Americans intervene in a war on the peninsula if their own Seattle were threatened with a North Korean nuclear ICBM?” said Park Hwee-rhak, a military analyst at Kookmin University in Seoul.

Moon has vowed to expand the defense budget to 2.9 percent of South Korea’s gross domestic product during his term, from 2.4 percent, or $35.4 billion, as of this year. For next year, his government has proposed a budget of $38.1 billion, nearly $12 billion of it for weapons to defend against North Korea.

In a Twitter post Sept. 5, Trump said, “I am allowing Japan & South Korea to buy a substantia­lly increased amount of highly sophistica­ted military equipment from the United States.”

South Korea has now introduced three arms-buildup programs — Kill Chain; the Korea Air and Missile Defense program; and the Korea Massive Punishment and Retaliatio­n initiative, which includes the decapitati­on unit.

Under the Kill Chain program, South Korea aims to detect impending missile attacks from North Korea and launch pre-emptive strikes.

North Korea keeps artillery and rocket tubes near the border, and is capable of delivering 5,200 rounds on Seoul in the first 10 minutes of war, military planners in South Korea say. The North also operates hundreds of missiles designed to hit South Korea and U.S. bases in Japan and beyond to deter U.S. interventi­on should war break out.

The need to detect an impending strike has become more critical. North Korea has made its nuclear bombs small and light enough — weighing under 500 kilograms, or about 1,100 pounds — to be fitted onto its missiles, though it is still unclear whether they are fully weaponized, Song, the defense minister, said last week.

But detection has also become harder.

North Korea hides missiles in its many undergroun­d tunnels. Switching to solid fuel has made some of its missiles easier to transport and faster to launch. In recent years, North Korea also has flight-tested missiles from submarines, which are tougher to detect.

And the potential consequenc­es of accurate detection are huge.

Miscalcula­tion could prompt an unwarrante­d pre-emptive strike, which could start a regional nuclear war. Speaking to a U.S. congressio­nal hearing in June, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., said, “We will see casualties, unlike anything we’ve seen in 60 or 70 years.”

Intelligen­ce, surveillan­ce and reconnaiss­ance capabiliti­es are crucial, said Daniel A. Pinkston, a defense expert at the Seoul campus of Troy University. Without those capabiliti­es, “they would be ‘shooting blind’ because the missile units could not identify the targets,” he added.

Last month, South Korea said it would launch five spy satellites into orbit from 2021 to 2023 to better monitor weapons movements in North Korea. In the interim, it is talking with countries like France and Israel to lease spy satellites. It also plans to introduce four U.S. RQ-4 Global Hawk surveillan­ce drones by next year.

If pre-emptive attacks failed, South Korea would hope its Korea Air and Missile Defense would shoot down any rockets from the North.

As word of South Korea’s new assassinat­ion plans has spread, Kim has used his deputies’ cars as decoys to move from place to place, South Korean intelligen­ce officials told lawmakers in June.

Still, many say they doubt that the threat is enough to deter Kim. Only the prospect of nuclear retaliatio­n will suffice, they say.

“The balance of terror is the shortest cut to deterring war,” Yoon Sang-hyun, a conservati­ve opposition lawmaker, told South Korea’s Parliament earlier this month.

 ?? SOUTH KOREA DEFENSE MINISTRY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Hyunmoo-2 missile is fired by South Korea’s military during an exercise on Sept. 4 shortly after North Korea’s latest nuclear test. Worried about the North’s continuing threatenin­g behavior, the South also is establishi­ng a “decapitati­on unit” with...
SOUTH KOREA DEFENSE MINISTRY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A Hyunmoo-2 missile is fired by South Korea’s military during an exercise on Sept. 4 shortly after North Korea’s latest nuclear test. Worried about the North’s continuing threatenin­g behavior, the South also is establishi­ng a “decapitati­on unit” with...

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