Tension climbs for U.S., North Korea
Both nations warn of confrontation
A feared military confrontation between North Korea and the U.S. didn’t materialize over the weekend, but tensions between the two countries remain dangerously high for the indefinite future.
A failed test of a mediumrange ballistic missile that blew up almost immediately Sunday did not provoke a U.S. military response. Even so, North Korea has made progress with its nuclear weapons and missile programs and is led by an unpredictable dictator, Kim Jong Un, who views America’s new president as a threat. That won’t change anytime soon.
President Trump has vowed that he will not allow North Korea to develop a long-range missile capable of carrying a nuclear weapon that can strike the United States, and Kim has vowed to pursue that very goal to prevent a pre-emptive U.S. strike. Last week, North Korea warned that the two countries were edging toward nuclear war.
The U.S. military was watching North Korea intently Saturday as it marked the 105th birthday of founding leader Kim Il Sung, the grandfather of Kim Jong Un. North Korea traditionally marks the occasion with shows of military strength, including nuclear or missile tests. This time, it paraded its latest missile hardware through the capital Pyongyang, showing off many new weapons. They included a new short-range missile and the country’s latest
submarine-launched missile.
Ahead of the celebration, the Pentagon dispatched a carrier group to waters off the Korean peninsula, and Trump delivered an unspecified threat: “North Korea is a problem. The problem will be taken care of.”
The North Koreans did not test a nuclear weapon, which would have been its sixth test since 2006, a far more provocative move than a missile test. The U.S. military confirmed Sunday’s test was a dud.
Still, the U.S. showed no sign of backing down in the face of North Korea’s increasingly belligerent rhetoric and actions. Vice President Pence, who arrived Sunday in Seoul as part of a 10-day Asian trip, said, “Our resolve has never been stronger, our commitment to this historic alliance with the courageous people of South Korea has never been stronger, and with your help and God’s help, freedom will ever prevail on this peninsula.”
On Monday morning, Pence went to the military base Camp Bonifas near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating North and South Korea for a briefing with military leaders and to meet with American troops stationed there. The joint U.S.-South Korean camp is just outside the 2.5-mile-wide DMZ.
Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, Trump’s national security adviser, said on ABC’s This Week that the missile test “fits into a pattern of provocative and destabilizing and threatening behavior on the part of the North Korean regime.”
The U.S. has nearly 30,000 troops stationed in South Korea and recently began installing a missile defense system to protect the country — including 20 million people in Seoul — from a North Korean attack on the capital city, which is the region’s biggest fear.
Sunday’s ballistic missile test was a humiliating failure for Kim and may only spur him to accelerate his nuclear program.
David Albright, a nuclear expert with the Institute for Science and International Security, estimated that through 2020, North Korea will have enough plutonium and weapons-grade uranium for 25 to 50 nuclear weapons, according to a report provided to the Associated Press.
Tensions between the United States and North Korea also are heightened because Trump is in the first months of his presidency, and North Korea may be testing him. Trump’s answer: He is willing to unleash military power to eliminate any threat to the U.S. homeland. But Trump hasn’t ruled out non-military pressure by urging China — North Korea’s economic lifeline — to rein in its volatile neighbor to the south. On Sunday, Trump tweeted that China is “working with us on the North Korean problem.”
“Our resolve has never been stronger ... and with your help and God’s help, freedom will ever prevail on this peninsula.” Vice President Pence in Seoul