Weekend Herald

Pyongyang’s video hasty has White House in crosshairs

- Anna Fifield Protesters storm Parliament Trouble for Le Pen

A North Korean propaganda outlet yesterday released an inflammato­ry video clip showing a simulated attack on the White House, declaring “the enemy to be destroyed is in our sights”.

The video comes at a particular­ly tense time in relations between North Korea and the United States, with the Trump Administra­tion sending warships to the region in a show of force against Kim Jong Un’s regime.

Earlier this week, North Korea conducted large- scale artillery drills, showing off convention­al weaponry that can easily reach the South Korean capital of Seoul, home to some 25 million people.

One of the US navy’s largest submarines, the USS Michigan, which carries Tomahawk cruise missiles, docked in the South Korean port of Busan this week. The USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier, together with the destroyers and cruiser that make up its strike group, will be arriving in the Korean Peninsula area this weekend as well.

A North Korean website, Meari, or Echo, released the video showing photos of the White House and aircraft carriers with a target on them, as if they are in the crosshairs.

It then shows simulated footage of the aircraft carrier exploding in a ball of flames, with the caption: “When the enemy takes the first step towards provocatio­n and invasion.”

The 2.5 minute long video also included scenes from the huge military parade that North Korea held on April 15 to mark the anniversar­y of the birth of the state’s founder, Kim Il Sung, as well as showing footage of North Korean artillery and missile launches.

Against the background of missile launches, the caption read: “We will show you what a strong country that leads the world in nuclear and missile technology is capable of.”

North Korea is known for its bombastic rhetoric and exaggerate­d propaganda, but it has ramped out its output in recent weeks as tensions have risen.

During a concert held on April 16 and attended by Kim, a video was broadcast showing missiles arcing over the Pacific and leaving a US city in flames, followed by images of a burning American flag and a cemetery filled with white crosses.

Similar videos showing successful attacks on US cities were broadcast last year and in 2013. German police have arrested a German army officer suspected of posing as a Syrian refugee to carry out an attack that would be blamed on migrants. According to the Frankfurt prosecutor­s in charge of the investigat­ion, the 28- year- old, whose name wasn’t revealed in accordance with local customs, lived an incredible double life: He registered as a Syrian refugee under a false name at the end of 2015 and subsequent­ly claimed asylum in Bavaria, where he was assigned a place in a refugee shelter and even received benefits. Austrian authoritie­s had temporaril­y detained him this year when he attempted to retrieve a loaded gun he had hidden in a restroom at Vienna airport in January. The suspect, who held the rank of a lieutenant colonel, was stationed in France, but he was arrested while undergoing training in southern Germany. He now faces charges of plotting a terrorist attack, fraud and violation of gun laws. Chaos swept into Macedonia’s Parliament yesterday as demonstrat­ors stormed the building and attacked lawmakers to protest the election of a new speaker despite a months- old deadlock in efforts to form a new government. Clashes over several hours injured 77 people, including 22 police officers and several lawmakers, authoritie­s said. Neighbouri­ng countries, the European Union and the United States have expressed concern at the small Balkan nation’s escalating political crisis. Dozens of protesters, some of them masked, broke through a police cordon after the opposition Social Democrats and parties representi­ng Macedonia’s ethnic Albanian minority voted to name a new Parliament speaker. Many of the protesters were supporters of former Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski, whose conservati­ve party won elections in December but didn’t get enough votes to form a government on its own. He has been struggling to put together a coalition government. French presidenti­al candidate Marine Le Pen’s far- right party is in new turmoil — its temporary leader is stepping down over allegation­s he expressed doubt about Nazi gas chambers. National Front vicepresid­ent Louis Aliot said on BFM television yesterday that interim party leader Jean- Francois Jalkh is leaving his post because of comments reported in a 2000 interview. Jalkh took over this week after Le Pen said she would step aside to concentrat­e on her campaign.

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