ALERT The Winds of War Blow in Korea and The Far East

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment

jward

passin' thru
Others addressing it: Guess all we know for certain in the moment is "something" probably happened, it's "probably" ok/under control at the moment, and "the world remains on edge"....


Faytuks News Δ
@Faytuks
13m

Reports of explosion(s) at Gangneug Airbase in South Korea. Seems to be a accident according to a military official https://cmcglr.com/news/articleVi
"An Air Force Headquarters official says It is true that it is an accident." There is speculations that a missile **could** have caused this. There is also some footage reportedly backing this claim. If that's the case, then it's a SK misfire during drills. Unconfirmed (!!)
Some speculations that the news is currently under an embargo, hence the lack of reporting
View: https://twitter.com/Faytuks/status/1577345295049965571?s=20&t=7-0wbRaJnX37YdkBahE6wg


Another report
View attachment 368346
WLVN Analysis
@TheLegateIN

South Korean military missile test during an exercise fails.
Missile crashes into own airbase causing large explosions and fire: South Korean media report.

12:51 PM · Oct 4, 2022
·Twitter Web App
 

jward

passin' thru
Good lawd. Am I to assume the first that they tried is what failed and made that spectaculur hubbub earlier??


BNO News
@BNONews
3m

U.S., South Korea fire 4 missiles into the Sea of Japan in show of force against North Korea - Yonhap

Insider Paper
@TheInsiderPaper
2m

BREAKING: US and South Korea militaries fired 4 missiles after North Korea launched missile that overflew Japan - Yonhap
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Good lawd. Am I to assume the first that they tried is what failed and made that spectaculur hubbub earlier??


BNO News
@BNONews
3m

U.S., South Korea fire 4 missiles into the Sea of Japan in show of force against North Korea - Yonhap

Insider Paper
@TheInsiderPaper
2m

BREAKING: US and South Korea militaries fired 4 missiles after North Korea launched missile that overflew Japan - Yonhap
That poor sea of Japan must love all those missiles :lol:
 

jward

passin' thru
re: N.K. last missile test

Ankit Panda
@nktpnd
6m

I shared my thoughts with @willripleyCNN
.https://twitter.com/nktpnd/status/1577421085737648134?s=20&t=ut0-Tn-W4msEF90O99HHKQ
 

jward

passin' thru
Good lawd. Am I to assume the first that they tried is what failed and made that spectaculur hubbub earlier??


BNO News
@BNONews
3m

U.S., South Korea fire 4 missiles into the Sea of Japan in show of force against North Korea - Yonhap

Insider Paper
@TheInsiderPaper
2m

BREAKING: US and South Korea militaries fired 4 missiles after North Korea launched missile that overflew Japan - Yonhap
Yup, it is said to have been during the show of force efforts. Too cynical to even be surprised.

BNO News

@BNONews
36s

BREAKING: South Korea says one of its missiles crashed shortly after launch during show of force; no casualties
 

jward

passin' thru
S. Korean F-15K fighter fires 2 JADAM precision bombs in response to N.K. missile launch
18:01 October 04, 2022

SEOUL, Oct. 4 (Yonhap) -- A South Korean F-15K fighter fired two JADAM precision bombs at a firing range on a Yellow Sea island on Tuesday, in response to North Korea's intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) launch earlier in the day, the military said.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said that the F-15K dropped the Joint Direct Attack Munition bombs at a target in the range on the uninhabited island of Jikdo following air drills with U.S. warplanes in a combined strike package.

The strike package consisted of four F-15Ks and four U.S. F-16 fighters.

"Through the combined flight of the air strike package and precision strike drills, South Korea and the United States demonstrated their will to respond sternly to any Northern threats as well as their capabilities to conduct a precision strike at the origin of provocations based on the alliance's overwhelming forces," the JCS said in a press release.

The North fired an IRBM from Mupyong-ri in its northern province of Jagang in its first launch of an IRBM in eight months. The missile flew some 4,500 kilometers at an apogee of around 970 km at a top speed of Mach 17, according to the JCS.
An F-15K fighter takes off to engage in air drills with the U.S. military on Oct. 4, 2022, in this photo provided by South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff. (PHOTO NOT FOR SALE) (Yonhap)
 

jward

passin' thru
NK NEWS
@nknewsorg

BREAKING: NK News confirmed a South Korean Hyunmoo-2 ballistic missile launch failed at a base in the east coast city of Gangneung late on Oct. 4, according to the ROK Joint Chiefs of Staff. The ROK military said there were no casualties. (1/2)
The failed launch came during combined US-ROK surface-to-surface missile drills conducted in response to North Korea's intermediate-range ballistic missile test over Japan earlier Tuesday, the JCS said. The US and ROK each successfully fired 2 ATACMS at targets in the sea (2/2)
View: https://twitter.com/nknewsorg/status/1577432480092913664?s=20&t=ut0-Tn-W4msEF90O99HHKQ

5:54 PM · Oct 4, 2022
·TweetDeck
 

jward

passin' thru

North Korea fires two ballistic missiles, slams UN meet

Issued on: 06/10/2022 - 01:08
The United Nations Security Council is seen at the UN headquarters in New York in September 2022 The United Nations Security Council is seen at the UN headquarters in New York in September 2022 Ed JONES AFP/File


2 min

Seoul (South Korea) (AFP) – North Korea fired two ballistic missiles Thursday, Seoul's military said, as the UN Security Council met to discuss Pyongyang's earlier, highly provocative launch of a missile over Japan.


The launch is Pyongyang's sixth in less than two weeks, and comes two days after it fired an intermediate-range ballistic missile over Japan, prompting Tokyo to issue a rare evacuation warning.
South Korea's military said it had detected two short-range ballistic missiles launched from the Samsok area in Pyongyang towards the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan.

"Our military has reinforced monitoring and surveillance and is maintaining utmost readiness in coordination with the United States," Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement.
Japan's coastguard also confirmed the launch of two potential ballistic missiles, with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida telling reporters that the recent testing spate was "unacceptable".
"Even in this short period since the end of September, this is the sixth time. This is absolutely unacceptable," he said.
Pyongyang's Tuesday test of what officials and analysts said was a Hwasong-12 that travelled likely the longest horizontal distance of any North Korean test before, prompted the United States to call for the emergency Security Council meeting.

But North Korea's longtime ally and economic benefactor Beijing blamed Washington for provoking the spate of launches by Kim Jong Un's regime.
Deputy Chinese ambassador to the UN Geng Shuang said North Korea's recent launches were "closely related" to military exercises in the region conducted by the United States and its allies.
Geng accused the US of "poisoning the regional security environment," he told the council.

Seoul, Tokyo and Washington have ramped up joint military drills in recent weeks, including large-scale naval manoeuvers and anti-submarine exercises.
America said Wednesday it would redeploy the nuclear-powered USS Ronald Reagan to the Korean Peninsula for a second visit in less than a month.
North Korea's foreign ministry issued a statement Thursday slamming the UN Security Council meeting and accusing the US of "posing a serious threat to the stability of the situation on the Korean peninsula" with the redeployment of the aircraft carrier.

'Bad actions'​

The launches are part of a record year of weapons tests by isolated North Korea, which leader Kim Jong Un has declared an "irreversible" nuclear power, effectively ending the possibility of denuclearisation talks.
The US request for the meeting was backed by Britain, France, Albania, Norway and Ireland.
"This is a clear effort by China and Russia to reward DPRK for their bad actions," said Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US ambassador to the UN.
"We need to turn quickly to strengthening the 1718 sanctions regime, not considering sanctions relief," she added.
China and Russia vetoed a US Security Council resolution in May imposing new penalties on North Korea, after the body had unanimously adopted heavy sanctions in 2017.

The council has been divided on responding to Pyongyang's nuclear ambitions for months, with Russia and China on the sympathetic side and the rest of the council pushing for punishment.
Analysts say that Pyongyang has seized the opportunity of stalemate at the UN to conduct ever more provocative weapons tests.

Officials in Seoul and Washington have been warning for months that Pyongyang will conduct another nuclear test, likely after the Chinese Party Congress on October 16.
"At this point, for Kim to turn back and halt provocations would seem counterproductive to his interests, not to mention the amount of resources squandered to conduct these weapons tests," Soo Kim, analyst at the RAND Corporation, told AFP.

"We are indeed in a cycle of weapons provocations. What's left, essentially, is an ICBM test and potentially the long-awaited seventh nuclear test."

 

danielboon

TB Fanatic

North Korea flies warplanes near South Korea after missile launches​

The military said South Korea responded by scrambling 30 fighter jets and other warplanes, though they didn’t engage in any clash with the North Korean aircraft.
A TV screen showing a news program reporting about North Korea's missile launch with file footage is pictured.


A TV screen showing a news program reporting about North Korea's missile launch with file footage, is seen at the Seoul Railway Station in Seoul, South Korea. | Lee Jin-man/AP Photo
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
10/06/2022 07:35 AM EDT
North Korea flew 12 warplanes near its border with South Korea on Thursday, prompting the South to scramble 30 military planes in response, Seoul officials said. The highly unusual incident came hours after North Korea fired two ballistic missiles into the sea in its sixth round of missile tests in less than two weeks.
Eight North Korean fighter jets and four bombers flew in formation and were believed to have conducted air-to-surface firing drills, South Korea’s military said.

The military said South Korea responded by scrambling 30 fighter jets and other warplanes, though they didn’t engage in any clash with the North Korean aircraft. It refused to provide further details, including how close to the border the North Korean planes flew.


Tensions have risen sharply on the Korean Peninsula as North Korea’s recent barrage of missile tests prompted South Korea, the United States and Japan to conduct joint drills in response.
Earlier Thursday, North Korea launched two short-range ballistic missiles toward its eastern waters. The launches came after the United States redeployed an aircraft carrier near the Korean Peninsula in response to North Korea’s launch of a nuclear-capable missile over Japan.
North Korea has conducted a record number of missile tests this year. South Korean officials said the North may further raise tensions by testing an intercontinental ballistic missile or conducting its first nuclear test explosion since 2017, following an old pattern of heightening tensions before trying to wrest outside concessions.
Some experts say North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is determined to continue with weapons tests aimed at boosting his nuclear arsenal in defiance of international sanctions. They say North Korea’s goal is to eventually win recognition as a legitimate nuclear state from the United States and the lifting of sanctions, though the United States and its allies have shown no sign of doing so.
The latest missiles were launched 22 minutes apart from North Korea’s capital region and landed between the Korean Peninsula and Japan, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement. The first missile flew 350 kilometers (217 miles) and reached a maximum altitude of 80 kilometers (50 miles) and the second flew 800 kilometers (497 miles) with an apogee of 60 kilometers (37 miles).
The flight details were similar to Japanese assessments announced by Defense Minister Yasukazu Hamada, who confirmed that the missiles didn’t reach Japan’s exclusive economic zone.
He added that the second missile was possibly launched on an “irregular” trajectory. It is a term that has been used to describe the flight characteristics of a North Korean weapon modeled after Russia’s Iskander missile, which travels at low altitudes and is designed to be maneuverable in flight to improve its chances of evading missile defenses.
U.S., South Korean and Japanese destroyers launched joint drills later Thursday off the Korean Peninsula’s east coast to horn their abilities to search, track and intercept North Korean ballistic missiles, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
The U.S. destroyer is part of the strike group led by the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan, which returned to the waters in what South Korea’s military called an attempt to demonstrate the allies’ “firm will” to counter North’s continued provocations and threats.
The strike group was in the area last week as part of previous drills between South Korea and the United States, and the allies’ other training involving Japan. North Korea considers such U.S.-led drills near the peninsula as an invasion rehearsal and views training involving a U.S. carrier more provocative.
South Korea’s military said it has also boosted its surveillance posture and maintains readiness in close coordination with the United States. The U.S. Indo Pacific Command said the launches didn’t pose an immediate threat to United States or its allies, but still highlighted the “destabilizing impact” of North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida spoke by phone Thursday and agreed that North Korea’s recent missile tests are “a serious, grave provocation” that threatens international peace, according to Yoon’s office. Kishida earlier said the North’s continued launches are “absolutely intolerable.”
Moon Hong Sik, a South Korean Defense Ministry spokesperson, said North Korea’s accelerating tests also reflect an urgency to meet Kim Jong Un’s arms development goals.
Kim last year described an extensive wish list of advanced nuclear weapons systems, including more powerful ICBMs, multiwarhead missiles, underwater-launched nuclear missiles and tactical nuclear arms.
On Tuesday, North Korea staged its most provocative weapons demonstration since 2017, firing an intermediate-range missile over Japan, forcing the Japanese government to issue evacuation alerts and halt trains.
Experts said the weapon was likely a Hwasong-12 missile capable of reaching the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam and beyond.
Other weapons tested in recent days included Iskander-like missiles and other ballistic weapons designed to strike key targets in South Korea, including U.S. military bases there.
North Korea’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement Thursday that the redeployment of the Reagan strike group poses “a serious threat to the stability of the situation on the Korean peninsula and in its vicinity.” The ministry said it strongly condemns U.S.-led efforts at the U.N. Security Council to tighten sanctions on the North over its recent missile testing, which it described as a “just counteraction” to joint U.S.-South Korean drills.
After the North’s intermediate-range missile launch, the United States and South Korea also carried out their own live-fire drills that have so far involved land-to-land ballistic missiles and precision-guided bombs dropped from fighter jets.
But one of the tit-for-tat launches nearly caused catastrophe early Wednesday when a malfunctioning South Korean Hyumoo-2 missile flipped shortly after liftoff and crashed into the ground at an air force base in the eastern coastal city of Gangneung. South Korea’s military said no one was hurt.
After Tuesday’s North Korean launch, the United States, Britain, France, Albania, Norway and Ireland called for an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council. But the session Wednesday ended with no consensus, underscoring a divide among the council’s permanent members that has deepened over Russia’s war on Ukraine.
Russia and China during the meeting insisted to fellow Security Council members that U.S.-led military exercises in the region had provoked North Korea into acting.
The United States and its allies expressed concern that the the council’s inability to reach consensus on North Korea’s record number of missile launches this year was emboldening North Korea and undermining the authority of the United Nations’ most powerful body.
North Korea has fired more than 40 ballistic and cruise missiles over more than 20 launch events this year, using the stalled diplomacy with the United States and Russia’s war on Ukraine as a window to speed up arms development. North Korea flies warplanes near South Korea after missile launches
 

jward

passin' thru
Breaking:
12 North Korean warplanes fly in formation, apparently stage air-to-surface firing drills - South Korean military
South Korean jets take off in response - Yonhap


8 North Korean fighter jets and 4 bomber jets flew in formation in an apparent air-to-surface firing drills, South Korea’s JCS says - NK News


JUST IN: In response to North Korean warplane formation flight, around 30 South Korean fighter jets flew out to respond, South Korean military says - NK News


Some 30 South Korean fighter jets were immediately deployed to the area in an "overwhelming" response to the flight, which is a move unseen over the past year, the JCS said.


The DPRK warplanes breached South Korea’s “special surveillance line” near the border at an unspecified location this afternoon, South Korea's military says - NK News
• • •
 

jward

passin' thru
Update: The Pentagon: The aircraft carrier Reagan, with Japanese and South Korean forces, conducted exercises to counter ballistic missiles.

The Pentagon: North Korea's behavior is disruptive and irresponsible. We continue to work with our allies to demonstrate our commitment to their defense.
 

jward

passin' thru
Global: MilitaryInfo
@Global_Mil_Info
1h

Seems like there is conversations within South Korea about scrapping the inter-Korean military agreement.

Tensions seem to be heading towards how they were in 2017 or even worse, like they were in 2013.
 

jward

passin' thru

North Korean fires missiles, flies warplanes as it blames US for 'escalation' - Insider Paper​




North Korea fired two ballistic missiles Thursday and flew warplanes, while claiming its recent blitz of sanctions-busting tests were necessary countermeasures against joint military drills by the United States and South Korea.
As the United Nations Security Council met to discuss Pyongyang’s Tuesday launch of an intermediate-range ballistic missile over Japan, North Korea blamed Washington for “escalating the military tensions on the Korean peninsula”.
The recent launches — six in less than two weeks — were “the just counteraction measures of the Korean People’s Army”, Pyongyang’s foreign ministry said in a statement Thursday.

Seoul, Tokyo and Washington have ramped up joint military drills in recent weeks, and carried out fresh exercises Thursday involving a US navy destroyer from the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft carrier’s strike group.
The United States redeployed the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to waters east of South Korea as part of a broad-ranging military response to Pyongyang’s Tuesday test, which also included joint bombing and missile drills.
The carrier’s redeployment prompted an angry response from the North, with the foreign ministry saying it posed “a serious threat to the stability of the situation on the Korean peninsula”.
Seoul’s military said it had scrambled 30 fighter jets Thursday after 12 North Korean warplanes staged a rare “formation flight north of the inter-Korean air boundary [and] conducted air-to-surface firing drills.”
Early on Thursday, South Korea’s military said it had detected two short-range ballistic missiles launched from the Samsok area in Pyongyang towards the East Sea, also known as the Sea of Japan.
It appeared to be the first time North Korea has fired missiles from Samsok, an official from Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters.

He added that they look like a “different type of short-range ballistic missiles” from previous launches.
Tokyo also confirmed the launches, with defence minister Yasukazu Hamada telling reporters that it was important not to “overlook the significant improvement of (North Korea’s) missile technology“.
Later Thursday, South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol spoke by phone to Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, with the pair agreeing that the North’s “reckless provocation” must be stopped.
They agreed on the need to “deliver a message to the North that consequences follow provocations”, Seoul’s presidential office said in a statement.

– China slams US –​

Pyongyang’s Tuesday firing of what officials and analysts said was a Hwasong-12 that travelled likely the longest horizontal distance of any North Korean test, prompted the United States to call for the emergency Security Council meeting.
At the meeting, North Korea’s longtime ally and economic benefactor China blamed Washington for provoking the spate of launches by Kim Jong Un’s regime.

Deputy Chinese ambassador to the UN Geng Shuang said North Korea’s recent launches were “closely related” to military exercises in the region conducted by the United States and its allies.
Geng accused Washington of “poisoning the regional security environment”.
The launches are part of a record year of weapons tests by isolated North Korea, which leader Kim has declared an “irreversible” nuclear power, effectively ending the possibility of denuclearisation talks.
US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield called for “strengthening” existing sanctions on North Korea, something China and Russia vetoed in May.
The council has been divided on responding to Pyongyang’s nuclear ambitions for months, with Russia and China on the sympathetic side and the rest of the council pushing for punishment.
Analysts say Pyongyang has seized the opportunity of stalemate at the UN to conduct ever more provocative weapons tests.

Officials in Seoul and Washington have been warning for months that Pyongyang will also conduct another nuclear test, likely after China’s Party Congress on October 16.
“At this point, for Kim to turn back and halt provocations would seem counterproductive to his interests, not to mention the amount of resources squandered to conduct these weapons tests,” Soo Kim, an analyst at the RAND Corporation, told AFP.

“We are indeed in a cycle of weapons provocations. What’s left, essentially, is an intercontinental ballistic missile test and potentially the long-awaited seventh nuclear test.”
North Korean fires missiles, flies warplanes as it blames US for 'escalation' - Insider Paper
 

jward

passin' thru
S.Korean President, Japan PM want nations' relations back to 'good old days' -Newsis
1 minute readOctober 6, 20227:26 PM CDTLast Updated 4 hours ago
1 minute

South Korea's President Yoon Suk-yeol holds first official news conference, in Seoul
South Korea's President Yoon Suk-yeol delivers a speech as he holds his first official news conference, after taking office in May, to mark 100 days in office, in Seoul, South Korea August 17, 2022. Chung Sung-Jun/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

SEOUL, Oct 7 (Reuters) - South Korea's President Yoon Suk-yeol said on Friday he shared thoughts with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida that the relationship between the two countries should "return to the good old days", according to media outlet Newsis.

Yoon's remarks come a day after he held a 25-minute phone call with his counterpart on Thursday to discuss North Korea's missile launches.
 

jward

passin' thru

N. Korea's military claims to be 'gravely' watching Seoul-Washington aircraft carrier drills | Yonhap News Agency​


정주원


SEOUL, Oct. 8 (Yonhap) -- North Korea's military said Saturday it is "gravely" watching the Seoul-Washington joint naval exercises involving a nuclear-powered U.S. aircraft carrier, calling the operation "a military bluff."
Tensions have been escalating between the communist state and the Seoul-Washington alliance, following Pyongyang's launch of an intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) over Japan on Tuesday and the entailing South Korea-U.S. joint drills.
The 103,000-ton USS Ronald Reagan, the cream of the joint naval drills held Saturday, is being thoroughly monitored in the East Sea, an unnamed spokesperson for the North's defense ministry said in an interview with the state-run Korean Central News Agency.

"The nuclear-powered USS Ronald Reagan has conspired with the South Korean naval vessels to execute joint sea drills against our nation," the spokesperson told the North Korean news outlet.
"The move is a military bluff that is aimed at our just response for their apparently provocative, threatening South Korea-U.S. drills," the spokesperson added.

The North apparently referred to its recent firing of a series of ballistic missiles as "our just response."
"The DPRK armed forces are gravely watching the development of the current situation, which is very worrisome," the spokesperson said. DPRK stands for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's official name.
Seoul and Washington said the joint naval drills will run for two days until Saturday in the international waters of the East Sea.
Citizens watch the news at Seoul Station in central Seoul on Oct. 4, 2022, when North Korea fired an intermediate-range ballistic missile over Japan. (Yonhap)

Citizens watch the news at Seoul Station in central Seoul on Oct. 4, 2022, when North Korea fired an intermediate-range ballistic missile over Japan. (Yonhap)
 

jward

passin' thru
EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3

Update: Japan Defense: North Korea's continued firing of ballistic missiles cannot be tolerated.

2:11 PM · Oct 8, 2022
·Twitter Web App
 

jward

passin' thru

jward

passin' thru
Faytuks News Δ
@Faytuks
5h

Breaking: North Korea's leader inspects "training of tactical nuclear weapon unit" - KCNA
 

jward

passin' thru

North Korea’s recent missile tests are nuclear warning to US, ROK: State media | NK News​


View more articles by Colin Zwirko​



DPRK media releases photos and details on Kim Jong Un guiding 7 missile tests as well as air force and artillery drills

Kim Jong Un at a missile test in recent weeks | Image: KCNA (Oct. 10, 2022)
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un guided a series of tactical nuclear missile tests to simulate attacks against South Korea in recent weeks, state media reported Monday, releasing the first images and details of seven recent missile tests as well as air force and artillery drills.
Kim guided the missile tests — including of a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) and “new” intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) — as a warning and response to joint U.S.-ROK military drills, the Rodong Sinmun reported.
 

jward

passin' thru
FROM AFP NEWS

N.Korea Recent Tests Were 'Tactical Nuclear' Drills Overseen By Kim

By AFP - Agence France Presse
October 9, 2022

The seven recent North Korean missile launches were all "tactical nuclear" drills, state media said Monday, which were personally overseen by leader Kim Jong Un.

At a key party congress in January 2021, Kim outlined a five-year defence development plan, calling for the development of smaller and lighter nuclear weapons for "more tactical uses."

Seoul, Tokyo and Washington have ramped up combined naval exercises in recent weeks, infuriating Pyongyang which sees them as rehearsals for invasion and justifies its blitz of missile launches as necessary "countermeasures".

KCNA said the blitz of recent tests were a response to those countries' joint drills, adding the exercises were "under the simulation of an actual war".

North Korean army units involved in "the operation of tactical nukes staged military drills from September 25 to October 9 in order to check and assess the war deterrent and nuclear counterattack capability of the country, which comes to be a severe warning to the enemies," a report in the official KCNA said.

"Kim Jong Un, general secretary of the Workers' Party of Korea and chairman of its Central Military Commission, guided the military drills on the spot," it added.

With talks long stalled, Pyongyang has doubled down on its banned weapons programmes, firing an intermediate-range ballistic missile over Japan last week, with officials and analysts warning it has completed preparations for another nuclear test.

The seven recent tests -- which KCNA said were "launching drills of the tactical nuclear operation units" -- allowed North Korea's nuclear forces to display their "militant effectiveness and actual war capabilities," KCNA added.

sh/ceb/bfm
The Barron's news department was not involved in the creation of the content above. This story was produced by AFP. For more information go to AFP.com.
 

jward

passin' thru

Kim’s sister: ‘Giggly princess, de facto queen’​


Andrew Salmon​




SEOUL – Tour guides don’t commonly threaten to hurl their charges off tour buses, but it happened in 2005 in Pyongyang.
This writer was part of a visiting delegation of overseas reporters in North Korea when a German journalist approached the tour guide, a Mr. Choi, with a brace of seemingly reasonable questions.
First, she politely established that then-leader Kim Jong Il would pass away at some point – a point that Choi, a grizzled former state security official who had the unenviable task of escorting 18 foreign reporters through Pyongyang, conceded.
Then she popped the big one. She wondered whether, after his demise, there might be any possibility that North Korea could, one day – perhaps, just maybe – be led by a female Kim family member….?
Choi turned an impressive shade of purple. “If I could, I would throw you off the bus for that question!” he roared.
Shocked silence filled the bus. Rather than trying Choi’s blood pressure further, the German reporter – and her 17 colleagues – let the matter rest. Needless to say, though, the incident raised sharp questions about gender equality in North Korea.

Upon hearing the anecdote, Chun Su-jin laughs.
“I am not surprised,” says the author of the just-published North Korean Women in Power: Daughters of the Sun (Hollym, Seoul, 2022), which examines four female power players in the little-known state. “North Korean society is still very much male-oriented – it’s like a men’s heaven.”
It is not alone. South Korea, for all its democratic governance, cosmopolitan nous and global cool has a very un-level gender playing field. According to Seoul’s Ministry of Gender Equality and Family, in 2021, it ranked 102nd among 156 nations surveyed in the Gender Gap Index, and women fell far behind men in the employment rate (57.7% versus 75.2%).
If that is grim, how bad are things for citizens of its pitifully poor – and deeply isolated – northern neighbor?
“The reason I wrote this book is that is it such a men’s paradise,” Chun, a 40-something reporter for the Joongang Ilbo, one of the top three dailies in South Korea, tells Asia Times. “But somehow, these four ladies came up the ladder.”
That’s a story, or four stories. But Chun also had a more personal reason for writing the book: Grandparents from both sides of her family were refugees from North Korea who settled in the South.

“It is still Confucian society – Confucian communism!” Chun says of North Korea. “I am grateful to my grandparents for fleeing their home as – if I had been born there – I cannot even imagine.”
Chun’s new book examines the lives and careers of orchestra leader Hyun Song Wol, rumored to be Kim Jong Un’s protocol chief; Kim’s wife, Ri Sol Ju; and Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui. However, the subject who will likely seize most readers’ eyes is Kim’s high-profile younger sister: Kim Yo Jong, 35.
Her role in Pyongyang’s power structure – “de facto queen” in Chun’s words – and her position vis a vis her sister-in-law – whose role Chun describes as more like a first lady – speaks volumes about the hierarchies prevailing behind the bamboo curtain.
Author and Joongang Ilbo reporter Chun Su-jin speaks to Asia Times. Photo: Andrew Salmon/Asia Times

Good at good cop, good at bad cop

Kim first shot to global attention in 2018, when she joined the advance guard of her brother’s surprise diplomatic offensive.

.After seven years of self-imposed domestic seclusion, North Korea’s untried young leader summited, in rapid succession, with presidents Xi Jinping of China, Moon Jae-in of South Korea and Donald Trump of the United States.
South Koreans goggled at this attractive member of the ruling Kim clan – one entrusted, despite her youth, by her brother to test the international waters. That bespoke an obvious closeness between the siblings.
They had shared a fraught childhood. Although they were schooled at an elite Swiss school, they were away from home and family at a time when the survival of both the Kim clan and North Korea itself looked precarious. The nation was suffering a murderous famine. An entire school of foreign punditry (“the collapsists”) expected it to implode.
It did not, and the sibling bond forged in Switzerland endures. Recent photos both official (at her brother’s side at grand state affairs) and unofficial (waiting, with apparent anxiety, for her brother on the sidelines of summits) make clear her important position in Kim’s entourage.

“Kim Jong Un depends on her,” Chun says. “She is not any confidante – she is the go-to person.”
Chun remembers first seeing her in the flesh in 2018 at the Singapore summit between her brother and Trump. “She was all serious and daunting, in a silk blouse and a prim and proper skirt.”
However, citing an unnamed source with close-in knowledge – almost certainly North Korean – Chun describes Kim as a “giggly princess.” “She has the personality of an agashi [girl/unmarried woman],” Chun says. “But she is really smart – she knows how to play with power.”

And she has power. Kim is deputy director of the party’s Publicity and Information Department and the only female member of her brother’s brain trust, the State Affairs Commission.
As per multiple analyses, Kim’s public posture toward South Korea and the USA has shifted radically.
During the heady days of engagement in 2018 and 2019, she was the charming envoy. “Just remember how South Koreans loved her – we had headlines like, ‘Look at that smile!’” Chun says. “Everybody was smitten – especially Moon Jae-in.”
She adds, with reference to the then-president’s zeal for cross-DMZ engagement, “He was ready to be smitten.”
But engagement with North Korea cratered after Trump walked out of a 2019 summit in Hanoi, Vietnam. Then little sister Kim – whom Chun calls “totally versatile and talented in presenting any side” – transitioned to attack dog.
“She could be the ‘bad cop’ – and she is very good at it – and she can be the ‘good cop’ – and is very good at it,” Chun assesses.
In the “bad cop” role assailing South Korea, she has – unusually – added her name to state media editorials.
”That was one of the many firsts – in the past, this would have a [non-bylined] column – and reading between the lines, you can tell she is excited to do this,” Chun says. “She has guts. She is not afraid of anything.”
So could Kim – as is endlessly speculated in Western media – feasibly take over the reins of state if her brother was incapacitated or died?

“I have written a lot of stories posing this question, but I don’t have the answer,” Chun admits. “She could be an interim leader but the male elite will never acknowledge her as queen. They are still the Joseon Dynasty in that sense.”
Joseon, the last royal dynasty to rule the (undivided) Korean peninsula, lasted from 1392 to 1910, when it fell to Japanese annexation. Joseon’s queens were kings’ consorts, rather than ruling monarchs themselves.
That offers a possible hint at North Korean futures. “As long as the Kim dynasty is there, they are not ready for a queen up front,” Chun says.
Kim Jong Un in right royal form. Unusually for North Korea, Kim has appointed females to powerful, public positions. Photo: AFP

De facto queen and de jure first lady

North Korea confounds socio-political analysts who attempt to label it. It is a unique pot pourri, blending neo-Confucian social mores with post-communist trappings; extreme militarism with hereditary monarchism.
“North Korean society is not a communist society as Marx imagined it, is a dynasty that employs, or has the face, of communism,” Chun says.
The Kims, now in their third generation on the national throne, perch at the top of a deeply entrenched hierarchy based on the songbun class system. “Songbun is the color of blood,” Chun saiys. “If you have blue blood, you can never change that.”
Needless to say, all four of Chun’s subjects have blue liquid pulsing through their veins. This points to a neo-Joseon state of affairs in Pyongyang’s halls of power.

Kim Yo Jong is “de facto queen of North Korea and I think Kim Jong Un knows that too,” Chun says, in reference to the sister’s access to him, and thereby to power. “But one thing that can never change is that Kim Jong Un is number one, and she knows it – she knows how to utilize that hierarchy; she puts him first but is happy to be second.”
If Kim is de facto queen, what does that make her brother’s wife, Ri Sol-ju?
Ri, a former cheerleader, singer and beauty queen, is known to have borne Kim Jong Un two female children and there are rumors of a son.
While North Korea may appear bizarre to Western news readers, many South Korean analysts believe Kim is trying to “normalize” its governance. The process is visible in multiple areas – from the Western-style suits Kim sometimes dons to the increased decision-making role he has delegated to various party bodies.
It is also visible both in the role of women at the top, and the first lady-style role Ri plays at Kim’s side.
“He is always there with Ri Sol Ju, they go out with crossed arms,” says Chun. “He wants to present himself like a modern-day statesman, and that makes him smart, too.”
He is the first North Korean leader to be seen in public with his spouse.
“We never saw Kim Jong Il or Kim Il Sung with their wives,” Chun says. “It was unthinkable.” (Incidentally, Chun’s subtitle, “Daughters of the Sun” derives from state founder Kim Il Sung’s name, which roughly translates as “become the sun.”)
Noting that Ri is the “first lady that North Korea presents to the world,” Chun recalls a telling anecdote from the first Kim-Moon meeting in 2018: Speaking on-camera after the summit, Ri made a down-to-earth comment, complaining that her husband smoked too much.
“In North Korea, Kim Jong Un is a god,” Chun marvels. “That really tells us something about what kind of leader he wants to be: He wants to represent himself more as a modern leader.”
People watch a television broadcast showing footage of a North Korean missile test at a railway station in Seoul on September 28, 2021. Chun Su-jun hopes to paint a more nuanced picture of what is often seen as a rogue regime and garrison state. Photo: AFP / Jung Yeon-je
Maidens of the Kimdom
The high status enjoyed by Chun’s four subjects raises the wider question of women’s empowerment inside North Korea.
Some Korean War veterans remember female partisans fighting exclusively on the communist side. And female guerillas remain a favored icon in North Korean art. Is avowedly socialist North Korea – which also preceded South Korea in certain areas of gender legislation – more gender-unbiased than South Korea?
Chun is unconvinced. She dismisses early women’s rights policies as, “propaganda from Kim Il Sung – he wanted popular support from women.”
Even so, she believes that women have been emancipated by unplanned changes in the North Korean economy, taking on roles as not just homemakers but also businesspersons.
“In many households in North Korea it is the women who bring home the bacon at the jangmadang,” Chun says, referring to the unofficial but officially tolerated markets that have transformed North Korea’s consumer economy since the 1990s famines. “They have double burdens on their shoulders.”

Their double burdens will not seem alien to Western – or South Korean – working wives. And presenting North Korea as a “place where real people live” is one of the reasons Chun wrote her book – which is no dry analytical tome, but benefits from Chun’s ever-lively authorial voice.
“Whenever I see [North Korean] coverage in global media, I sense voyeurisms: missiles and strange leaders,” Chun said. “Many young South Koreans think it is a strange, foreign country and they don’t even want to think about reunifying, they think it will cost money.”
Recalling her late grandparents’ tears when they visited South Korean border lookout posts to stare into unreachable North Korea, reporter Chun says, “It is where my blood comes from.”
One day she would like to return to source.
“My dream is to be Pyongyang correspondent for the paper,” she says.
Follow this writer on Twitter @ASalmonSeoul

Kim’s sister: ‘Giggly princess, de facto queen’
 

jward

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Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Military News
@IndoPac_Info


#NorthKorea Said Recent Launches Were a Nuke Simulation to ‘Wipe Out’ Enemies
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un confirmed that Pyongyang’s recent spate of missile test launches were a simulation of nuclear attacks it would use to “hit and wipe out” South Korean and US targets.
View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1579724569132568576?s=20&t=_EwyLNC1VWqwUa1shmiqPA
 

jward

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Deborah Haynes
@haynesdeborah
I am security and defence editor at Sky News - DMs open or my email is Deborah.Haynes@sky.uk

NEW: Sir Jeremy Fleming, Director of UK spy agency @GCHQ, will use a rare, public speech on Tuesday to warn that China is seeking to exploit technologies in space and online in ways that could pose a “huge threat to us all”.
1/

Sir Jeremy will flag concerns about the potential for Beijing to target the satellites of opponents at a time of conflict, crippling a crucial domain relied upon by militaries to launch weapons and communicate. It is feared the technology could also be used to track people.
2/

The @GCHQ chief will also say the Chinese Communist Party is “learning the lessons” from Russia’s war in Ukraine, which has seen the UK and its allies hit the Russian economy with sanctions.
3/

Sir Jeremy will describe how Beijing could use digital currencies to track people’s transactions and also help to protect its economy from the sort of sanctions being applied to Vladimir Putin’s regime.
4/

The main thrust of the speech by Sir Jeremy will be about China and technology. The head of @GCHQ will highlight a paradox that Beijing’s “great strength combined with fear is driving China into actions that could represent a huge threat to us all”.
 

jward

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US policy on North Korea the least bad option​


Denny Roy​






As it has regularly done for decades, during the last few weeks the North Korean government reminded Washington, Seoul and Tokyo that it has unredressed grievances. Pyongyang signaled through several gestures that the long-running crisis on the Korean Peninsula will continue.
First, paramount leader Kim Jong Un reiterated in a September 9 speech that “there can be no bargaining over our nuclear weapons” even if the United States maintains economic sanctions against the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK).
Second, on the same occasion, Kim announced a standing order that DPRK commanders would launch nuclear weapons “automatically” if they lost communication with Kim. This was an answer to the South Korean government’s interest in developing a “decapitation” capability – preempting a DPRK missile launch by killing Kim to prevent him from giving the order.
Pyongyang is now saying that Kim’s assassination will cause the outcome Seoul hopes to avoid.
Third, Pyongyang said it would employ nuclear weapons if it expected an attack against an important DPRK strategic target or against the DPRK leadership, in effect announcing a nuclear first-use policy.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un speaking on September 2 last year at the third enlarged meeting of the Political Bureau of the 8th Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of Korea in Pyongyang. Photo: KCNA / KNS
Fourth, North Korea fired off another barrage of ballistic missiles in what had already been its busiest year for missile tests. Pyongyang said the launches tested the “actual war capabilities” of “tactical nuclear operation units.”

An interest in building up a tactical nuclear weapons capability is frightening because it indicates Pyongyang sees nukes as a warfighting weapon rather than simply an insurance policy to deter an enemy invasion.
Fifth, the latest barrage included a ballistic missile that overflew Japan, an intentionally provocative act.
This new spate of ominous DPRK signals has brought a resurgence of calls for the United States to change its stagnant North Korea policy.
“North Korea has already won” and “The US should admit defeat,” says one representative article in the Financial Times published October 8.
The argument is as follows:
The core of US policy is pressuring Pyongyang to give up its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs. Washington is willing to make a deal that would include economic and perhaps political benefits (such as diplomatic recognition) in exchange for the North Koreans trading away their nukes and missiles.
In the meantime, the United States refuses to officially recognize the DPRK as a nuclear weapons state and maintains a collection of punitive restrictions on economic engagement with North Korea.
Current US policy, however, is a proven failure, the argument continues. Not only is Pyongyang keeping its nuclear weapons, but it is also improving, expanding and diversifying its delivery systems. The situation gets steadily more dangerous as Washington waits in vain for the Kim regime to relent.

The argument leads to the recommendation that Washington should drop the insistence on Kim getting rid of his nukes and missiles, accept the DPRK as a permanent nuclear weapons state and negotiate an arms control agreement with Pyongyang to lower the risk of conflict on the Peninsula.
This, by the way, is exactly the outcome Kim wants. For months he has broadcast that he aspires to international acceptance of the DPRK as a “responsible nuclear weapons state.” North Korean officials are reportedly encouraged by the experiences of India and Pakistan, which at first incurred US displeasure when they acquired nuclear weapons but later became US security partners.
Obviously, the US approach of offering economic and political rewards for de-nuclearization has not worked. It seems increasingly unlikely to work in the future as well.

The notion of seeking success through an arms control agreement with Pyongyang, however, has weaknesses that deserve serious consideration.
It is easy to uncritically assume that abandoning a bad policy will lead to success. Logically, this is not necessarily true. The new policy might prove just as bad or worse, even if in different ways.
Washington’s official stance of not recognizing the DPRK as a nuclear weapons state is a joint policy followed also by Seoul and Tokyo. These allies would see a US abrogation of this position as a minor betrayal, another reason to question US reliability, and the apparent end of the US commitment to eventual DPRK denuclearization.
Acquiescing to North Korea’s permanent possession of nuclear weapons not only would be a blow to nuclear non-proliferation; it would arguably be the worst instance of nuclear proliferation in human history, given the profound criminality of the Pyongyang regime.

Offering arms control talks would elevate Kim to a position of strength. Instead of an outlaw state seeking international respectability, North Korea would be a fellow member of the nuclear weapons club with the United States, buoyed by the victory of forcing Washington to back down from its previous refusal to reward Pyongyang’s violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions.
Deciding to try for an arms control agreement is one thing; getting there is another.
Negotiations on a US-DPRK arms control agreement would likely be as difficult as were negotiations over de-nuclearization in 2018–2019. In 2018, Kim expressed willingness in principle to denuclearize.
By the time of the Hanoi Summit in 2019, however, it became clear that Kim was negotiating in bad faith, demanding sweeping sanctions relief while offering only the closure of obsolete nuclear research facilities in return.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump failed to reach agreement on a nuclear deal in which Kim proposed to dismantle part of the Yongbyon reactor complex. Photo: KCNA VIA KNS
Kim would still be pushing for an agreement in which he gains much of what he wants while giving the Americans little of what they want. Unquestionably, Kim would demand sanctions relief as a condition of any arms control agreement, immediately doing away with Washington’s strongest point of leverage.
Had denuclearization negotiations proceeded far enough, Pyongyang’s willingness to allow sufficient transparency and verification would have been gigantic hurdles. The same problems would arise in negotiations over an arms control agreement.
There is little reason to believe the DPRK would honor an arms control agreement. The Pyongyang government is notorious for cheating on and unilaterally repudiating its commitments.

It would be folly to assume that being officially recognized as a nuclear weapons state would somehow pacify the Kim regime and fundamentally transform its foreign policy.
Even with an arms control agreement, Pyongyang would still regularly accuse the United States of a “hostile” policy toward North Korea, using this as a justification for activities prohibited by the agreement. The accusation of aggressive intent and war-mongering by the USA would continue to be a useful domestic political tactic for a Kim regime that persistently fails to deliver prosperity at home.
In sum, it is very possible that tensions on the Peninsula would be no lower with an arms control agreement than they are now.
The idea that North Korea has “won” is dubious. Pyongyang has elected to build extraordinarily expensive weapons programs to counter a phantom threat (South Koreans are not hankering to absorb their impoverished cousins), diverting funds from economic development and isolating the country from trade and investment opportunities.
More accurately, no one is winning. The best that America’s current policy can promise is to maintain deterrence while the DPRK bolsters its arsenal, periodically tries to intimidate its adversaries and falls farther behind South Korea in economic and human development.

Alas, that might be the least bad option available.
Denny Roy (RoyD@EastWestCenter.org) is a senior fellow at the East-West Center, Honolulu. He specializes in strategic and international security issues in the Asia-Pacific region. Follow him on Twitter: @Denny_Roy808.

US policy on North Korea the least bad option
 

jward

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Status-6
@Archer83Able

Russia expressed "strong protest" to the Japanese Embassy in connection with the employment of HIMARS systems in joint Japan-US military exercises.
Japan had been warned of "imminent retaliatory measures," aimed at denying military threats for Russia, Russian MFA said.
(TASS)

10:33 AM · Oct 12, 2022
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