The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

North Korea sarin attack a concern, Japan’s leader says

Prime minister says Tokyo should bolster defenses.

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO — Prime Minister Shinzo Abe warned Thursday that North Korea may be capable of firing a missile loaded with sarin nerve gas toward Japan, as internatio­nal concern mounted that a missile or nuclear test by the authoritar­ian state could be imminent.

“There is a possibilit­y that North Korea is already capable of shooting missiles with sarin as warheads,” Abe told a parliament­ary panel on national security and diplomacy.

Abe was responding to a question about Japan’s readiness at a time of increased regional tension. A U.S. navy aircraft carrier is heading toward the Korean Peninsula as Pyongyang prepares for the 105th anniversar­y of the birth of its founder Kim Il Sung this weekend. And with U.S.-South Korean wargames ongoing, North Korean has intensifie­d rhetoric warning it would retaliate strongly against any aggression.

South Korea has long said it believes the North can conduct its sixth nuclear test whenever it chooses. The 38 North website, which monitors North Korea, said satellite imagery of the country’s Pyunggye-ri nuclear test site suggests it is “primed and ready” for a test blast.

Researcher­s Joseph S. Bermudez Jr. and Jack Liu wrote that images taken Wednesday show continued activity around the site’s north portal, as well as personnel and pallets of equipment or supplies in the main administra­tive area.

North Korea, which never signed the internatio­nal Chemical Weapons Convention, is believed to have up to 5,000 tons of chemical weapons, according to a South Korean defense white paper, though the North has never acknowledg­ed it.

Experts say if North Korea were to attack South Korea, it would likely target Seoul’s defenses with chemical and biological weapons dropped from aircraft or delivered via missiles, artillery and grenades.

Abe cited Syria, where dozens of people died recently in an alleged sarin nerve gas attack, as an example that Japan should take seriously, stressing the need to strengthen its deterrence against the North.

Japan has taken a few steps this week to reassure the public about its defense efforts. On Tuesday, the Foreign Ministry issued a travel advisory to Japanese residents and tourists in South Korea, reminding them of a growing tension. Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga denied any “imminent danger,” however.

Later Thursday, Abe called a National Security Council meeting to analyze the latest North Korea developmen­ts and ways to respond in case of a “provocatio­n” from Pyongyang, said Suga, a council member. North Korea has amassed “substantia­l amount” of chemical weapons produced at several facilities, he added, without citing sources.

The rising tension and the Trump administra­tion’s more assertive policy toward North Korea are apparently helping Abe’s government gain public support for a stronger defense.

Japan, under its postwar constituti­on, has limited the role of its military to self-defense only and relied on the U.S. for offensive and nuclear capability. But recently, Abe’s ruling party has proposed that Japan should bolster its missile defense.

 ?? WONG MAYE-E / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (center) cuts the ribbon at the Ryomyong high-rise district, as Pyongyang prepares for the 105th anniversar­y of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung, this weekend.
WONG MAYE-E / ASSOCIATED PRESS North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (center) cuts the ribbon at the Ryomyong high-rise district, as Pyongyang prepares for the 105th anniversar­y of the birth of its founder, Kim Il Sung, this weekend.

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