New York Daily News

DON’T MAKE ME NUKE YA!

- BY STEPHEN REX BROWN

NORTH KOREA denounced joint military exercises scheduled to start Monday between the U.S. and South Korea as “driving the situation into the uncontroll­able phase of a nuclear war.”

President Kim Jong Un’s regime slammed the annual drills while also vowing that Guam, Hawaii and the U.S. mainland could not escape a “merciless strike,” CNN reported Sunday.

The saber-rattling rhetoric was the latest example of escalating tensions between the U.S. and North Korea over its pursuit of a nuclear weapon.

“The Trump group’s declaratio­n of the reckless nuclear war exercises against the DPRK (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) . . . is a reckless behavior driving the situation into the uncontroll­able phase of a nuclear war,” an editorial in the official government newspaper Rodong Sinmun read.

In another editorial, North Korea slammed the exercises scheduled to run until Aug. 31 as a dangerous provocatio­n.

“The joint exercise is the most explicit expression of hostility against us, and no one can guarantee that the exercise won’t evolve into actual fighting,” the editorial read, according to South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency.

“If the United States is lost in a fantasy that war on the peninsula is at somebody else’s door far away from them across the Pacific, it is far more mistaken than ever.”

Some 40,000 South Korean and U.S. troops are to participat­e on land, sea and air in the exercises called Ulchi-Freedom Guardian.

North Korea has long criticized the exercises as hostile acts that raise the threat of an invasion.

The U.S. insists they are purely defensive.

Defense Secretary James Mattis said the exercises were planned before the latest escalation of tensions and that the focus of the drills is on

integratio­n between the two forces.

“The numbers are by design to achieve the exercise objectives, and you always pick what you want to emphasize,” Mattis said. “Right now there is a heavy emphasis on command post operations.”

But Mattis has not backed down from the possibilit­y of a military confrontat­ion with North Korea.

“There are strong military consequenc­es if the DPRK initiates hostilitie­s,” he said last week.

President Trump said earlier this month that North Korea faces “fire and fury like the world has never seen” if Pyongyang continues its threats against America.

North Korea’s recent progress in developing nuclear weapons — as well as missiles capable of reaching the U.S. mainland — has ratcheted up tensions.

A confidenti­al U.S. intelligen­ce assessment recently determined North Korea has created a miniaturiz­ed nuclear warhead.

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