North Korea has threatened the United States with “powerful follow-up measures” if it does not stop conducting joint military drills with South Korea.
In a statement released by North Korea’s foreign ministry, it stated that if the US “continuously persists in the grave military provocations”, North Korea will take into account more powerful follow-up measures.
“If [Washington] does not want any serious developments not suited to its security interests, it should stop the useless and ineffective war exercises at once. If not, it will have to totally take the blame for all the consequences.”
North Korea
This follows intelligence reports that Pyongyang is preparing for its first nuclear weapon test since 2017. Washington and Seoul on Monday, October 31, 2022, began one of their largest combined military air drills, which will end on Friday, November 4, 2022.
North Korea has also launched a series of missiles in recent weeks in response to the various drills. The current military drills, called Vigilant Storm, involve hundreds of airplanes conducting mock attacks 24 hours a day.
Early in October, Washington deployed its nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan near the Korean Peninsula in a move that was widely seen as a warning to the North and the carrier took part in a round of naval drills. US Rear Admiral Buzz Donnelly, the strike group’s commander, revealed that Ronald Reagan Strike Group’s visit is of strategic importance to the US and Republic of Korea relationship and is a clear and unambiguous demonstration of US commitment to the Alliance.
The South Korean navy noted that the exercises are aimed at demonstrating the allies’ “powerful resolve to respond to North Korean provocations” and improving their ability to perform joint naval operations.
It is the first US-South Korea joint military training involving a US aircraft carrier since 2017.
South Korea-US military drill
Seoul revealed that the “rare” deployment showed the “resolve of the South Korea-US Alliance to respond sternly to any North Korean provocations”. The carrier is currently carrying out flight operations in the Philippine Sea.
Pyongyang in October indicated that its missile launches were a “simulation” of a nuclear attack on the South. It claimed to have successfully simulated hitting South Korea’s military bases, ports and airports, and said the missiles were designed to carry tactical nuclear weapons.
In September, North Korean leader, Kim Jong-un, declared Pyongyang was an “irreversible” nuclear power and revised laws, allowing it to use nuclear weapons pre-emptively. Its previous policy had been to only use the weapons in response to an attack.
In response, the US and South Korean governments released a joint statement expressing concern about what they called “escalatory and destabilizing messaging related to nuclear weapons use” by North Korea.
North Korea has also stepped up its frequency of missile firings this year, carrying out over 40 launches so far, the highest ever. Despite crippling sanctions, Pyongyang has conducted six nuclear tests between 2006 and 2017.
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