August 17, 2015
North Korea threatened to attack the United States should it not call off this year’s Ulchi Freedom Guardian (UFG) exercise, an annual joint U.S.-South Korean military drill, CNN reports.
“If [the] United States wants their mainland to be safe, then the Ulchi Freedom Guardian should stop immediately,” a newswoman for the state TV station, KCNA, emphasized.
North Korea is ready to “retaliate against the U.S. with tremendous muscle,” according to a spokesman for North Korea’s National Defense Commission (NDC).
“The further Ulchi Freedom Guardian joint military exercises are intensified, the strongest military counteraction the (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) will take to cope with them,” he added.
The spokesman also noted that the North Korean military has new weapon systems unknown to the world in its arsenal:
The army and people of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) are no longer what they used to be in the past when they had to counter the US nukes with rifles. North Korea… is the invincible power equipped with both [the] latest offensive and defensive means unknown to the world.
However, South Korea and the United States appeared unimpressed by the North’s bellicose rhetoric and commenced the military drill today. According to Yonhap, Admiral Choi Yoon-hee, the head of South Korea’s military, ordered South Korean forces to “retaliate more powerfully and resolutely against any enemy provocation” during the UFG exercise.
“The (South Korean) military is standing with a war-readiness position under which any types of North Korean provocations could be retaliated against strongly at the spot,” another South Korean military official resolutely noted.
The military drill, involving 80,000 troops from South Korea, the United States, Australia, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, France, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, will last for 14 days and end on August 28.
According to South Korean media, it is the largest computerized military exercise and simulates the defense of South Korea against attacks from the North.
The aim of the drill is to “to enhance … readiness, protect the region and maintain stability on the Korean peninsula,” according to a statement from the Korea-U.S. Combined Forces Command quoted by CNN.
North Korea will in all likelihood test-fire missiles during the drill. Back in March, Pyongyang fired two ballistic missiles into the sea in order to voice its discontent over two South Korean-U.S. military exercises that took place in March and April 2015. North Korea has already designated the next 14 days as a special vigilance period, according to Yonhap.
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