The Evening Leader

US, allies fly fighter jets amid North Korea tensions

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — The United States and its Asian allies flew dozens of fighter jets over waters surroundin­g the Korean Peninsula on Tuesday in a show of force as their diplomats discussed a coordinate­d response to a possibly imminent North Korean nuclear test.

The flights came as U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman traveled to Seoul for discussion­s with South Korea and Japanese officials over the gathering North Korean threat and warned of a “swift and forceful” counterres­ponse if the North proceeds with a nuclear test explosion, which would be its first in nearly five years.

If staged, the test could be another leap forward in North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s goal of building an arsenal that can viably threaten regional U.S. allies and the American homeland. That would escalate a pressure campaign aimed at forcing the United States to accept North Korea as a nuclear power and negotiatin­g economic and security concession­s from a position of strength.

While the Biden administra­tion has vowed to push for additional internatio­nal sanctions if North Korea conducts a nuclear test, prospects for robust punitive measures are unclear because of divisions between permanent United Nations Security Council members.

“Any nuclear test would be in complete violation of U.N. Security Council resolution­s. There would be a swift and forceful response to such a test,” Sherman said after meeting with South Korean Vice Foreign Minister Cho Hyundong. “We continue to urge Pyongyang to cease its destabiliz­ing and provocativ­e activities and choose the path of diplomacy.”

Sherman and Cho are planning a threeway meeting with Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Mori Takeo on Wednesday over the North Korean nuclear issue.

Extending the countries’ joint displays of military might, four U.S. F-16 fighter jets flew in formation with 16 South Korean planes — including F-35A stealth fighters — over waters off South Korea’s eastern coast, an exercise aimed at demonstrat­ing an ability to quickly respond to North Korean provocatio­ns, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. The United States and Japan conducted a separate drill involving six aircraft — four Japanese F-15 fighters and two American F-16s — above waters between the Korean Peninsula and Japan, Japan’s Defense Ministry said.

The flights came a day after U.S. and South Korean forces fired eight surface-tosurface missiles into South Korea’s eastern waters to match a weekend missile display by North Korea, which fired the same number of weapons from multiple locations Sunday in what was likely its biggest single-day testing event.

North Korea has conducted 18 rounds of missile launches in 2022 alone — including its first demonstrat­ions of interconti­nental ballistic missiles since 2017 — exploiting a favorable environmen­t to push forward weapons developmen­t, with the Security Council effectivel­y paralyzed over Russia’s war on Ukraine.

North Korea may soon up the ante as U.S. and South Korean officials say it is all but ready to conduct another detonation at its nuclear testing ground in the northeaste­rn town of Punggye-ri. Its last such test and sixth overall was in September 2017, when it claimed to have detonated a thermonucl­ear bomb designed for its ICBMs.

Meanwhile on Tuesday, U.S. special envoy for North Korea Sung Kim said Washington and its allies were increasing­ly concerned by not only the unpreceden­ted number of ballistic missile launches but also because “senior North Korean officials have used rhetoric that could suggest the use of tactical nuclear weapons.” He did not elaborate.

Since taking power in 2011, Kim has accelerate­d nuclear weapons developmen­t despite limited resources and has shown no willingnes­s to fully surrender an arsenal he sees as his strongest guarantee of survival.

Experts say with its next nuclear test, North Korea could claim an ability to build small bombs that could be placed on a multiwarhe­ad ICBM or fit on short-range missiles that could reach South Korea and Japan.

Rafael Mariano Grossi, director general of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, said Monday there are indication­s that one of the passages at the Punggye-ri testing ground has been reopened, possibly in preparatio­n for a nuclear test.

Hours before Sherman’s meeting in Seoul, State Department spokespers­on Ned Price told reporters in Washington that the United States believes North Korea could seek its seventh test “in the coming days.”

The Biden administra­tion’s punitive actions over North Korea’s recent weapons tests have been limited to largely symbolic unilateral sanctions. Russia and China vetoed a U.S.-sponsored resolution in the Security Council that would have imposed additional sanctions on North Korea over its previous ballistic tests on May 25.

 ?? Tribune News Service ?? People watch a TV at the Seoul Railway Station showing a file image of a North Korean missile launch on March 24, 2022, in Seoul, South Korea.
Tribune News Service People watch a TV at the Seoul Railway Station showing a file image of a North Korean missile launch on March 24, 2022, in Seoul, South Korea.

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