Recently I posted a blog about North Korea’s nuclear weapons test. http://cyberpolyticks.blogspot.com/2013/02/north-korea-nuclear-test.html
Today I found this related article on the internet.
Arms Race in Korea
By Night Watch 2/15/2013
South Korea: South Korea's military will deploy cruise
missiles capable of striking North Korea and accelerate the development of
ballistic missiles, officials said on 12 February.
Comment: The significance of this development, when
implemented, is that it would represent the public manifestation of an arms
race that has been evolving for decades. Unable to support an air force, the
North Koreans developed ballistic missiles to give them the ability to strike their
enemies beyond the peninsula, in other words, to hold the populations of South
Korea, Japan
and lately Guam or possibly part of the western US at
risk.
Constrained by the US
and by international arms control agreements from building its own ballistic missiles,
South Korea has
continued to modernize its air force and has developed cruise missiles against
which North Korea
has no defense. It has not fielded the cruise missiles, but probably can do so
quickly. The combination of North Korean long range rocket tests and nuclear
detonations has removed most reasons for South Korean restraint.
If North Korean assertions about the success and potential
sophistication of the device are accurate, South
Korea might deem itself more vulnerable than
ever, despite US assurances, and justified in quietly starting or continuing
its own nuclear or other weapons research.
US and Allied deterrence measures have prevented war for six
decades, but lately have had no measurable influence in deterring North Korean
provocations, preventing the development of nuclear weapons and missile
delivery systems or in stopping sales of North Korean missiles and conventional
weapons to Pakistan, Iran, Syria and Libya. The US
also has shown itself recently to be slow or unable to respond to provocations
in a timely fashion. As a result, the new North Korean leader seems less
intimidated by the US
than were his forbears.
China
cannot or will not restrain North Korea.
There is a strategic imbalance in northeast Asia
now. North Korea
is a nuclear weapons state and South Korea
is not. Having an Allied counter-attack capability is far less comforting than
having a first strike doctrine and capability at hand. That was the key point
made by the South Korean Chief of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in testimony last
week
North Korea:
For the record. There follows excerpts from key North Korean statements on 12
February.
Test Announcement. "The Korean Central News Agency
released the following report on Tuesday: The scientific field for national
defence of the Democratic Peoples' Republic of Korea (DPRK) succeeded in the
third underground nuclear test at the site for underground nuclear test in the
northern part of the DPRK on Tuesday."
"The test was carried out as part of practical measures
of counteraction to defend the country's security and sovereignty in the face
of the ferocious hostile act of the U.S.
which wantonly violated the DPRK's legitimate right to launch satellite for
peaceful purposes."
"The test was conducted in a safe and perfect way on a high
level with the use of a smaller and light A-bomb unlike the previous ones, yet
with great explosive power."
"It was confirmed that the test did not give any adverse
effect to the surrounding ecological environment."
North Korean Commentary. "Our third nuclear test is a
resolute self-defensive measure to counter the United
States' hostile act against the DPRK."
"The successful launch of the second version of the
artificial earth satellite Kwangmyo'ngso'ng-3 in December last year, to all its
intents and purposes, was a project for peaceful purposes, which was carried
out according to the scientific and technological development plan for economic
construction and for the improvement of the people's living standards."
"The main purpose of the nuclear test this time is to
show our army and people's surging indignation at the United
States' brigandish hostile act and to
demonstrate the determination and capabilities of military-first Korea
to defend the sovereignty of the country to the end…"
"Our nuclear test is an absolutely just self-defensive
measure that violates no international law…"
"It is since long ago that the United
States has put our country in the list of
the targets for preemptive nuclear strikes…
"The nuclear test conducted this time is the first round
of countermeasures that we have carried out by exercising maximum
self-restraint…."
"If the United States
makes the situation complicated by remaining hostile through to the end, we
will have no choice but to take serial measures with more intense second and
third response."
Comment: The North Koreans sell anything that earns hard
currency. There is no evidence yet in the public domain, but it is highly
likely that there were Iranian observers of the nuclear detonation, as there
reportedly were for the so-called space launch in December.
China-North Korea:
China's
official reaction. China
"firmly" opposes the latest nuclear test conducted by the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), according to a statement issued by the
Chinese Foreign Ministry on Tuesday.
"On 12 February
2013, the DPRK conducted another nuclear test in disregard of the
common opposition of the international community," said the statement.
"The Chinese government is firmly opposed to this act."
The DPRK's official KCNA news agency has confirmed the
nuclear test took place.
The Foreign Ministry said in the statement that it is the
firm stand of the Chinese side to bring about denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula, prevent nuclear
proliferation and safeguard peace and stability in Northeast Asia.
Comment: The Chinese are likely to vote for more sanctions in
the UN, but they are unlikely to announce in public the punishments they will
inflict on North Korea
for disregarding Chinese advice, if any. An easy first start is to cut off the
flow of crude through the Chinese pipeline which supplies up to a million tons
a year, nearly the entire North Korean supply. The range of Chinese economic
pressure points on North Korea
is quite extensive.
China's
private reaction to the North Korean test will be a measure of its maturity as
a rising world power as well as the regional hegemon. If China
cannot control North Korea,
it does not deserve to be considered a world power.
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