North Korea Makes Biggest Move Since 2017 as Biden Focuses on China and Russia
South Korean President Moon Jae-in called an emergency National Security Council meeting and called the missile a “midrange ballistic missile launch,” NBC reported
The United States Indo-Pacific Command condemned the launch in a statement and called upon North Korea to “refrain from further destabilizing acts.”
“While we have assessed that this event does not pose an immediate threat to U.S. personnel, territory, or that of our allies, we will continue to monitor the situation,” the statement said.
Is this a signal that Kim is serious about ending his self-imposed moratorium on ICBM and Nuke testing? If so, what then?
North Korea fires its longest-range missile since 2017, the latest in a string of test launches https://t.co/pQwlMUWEhF— Robert Manning (@Rmanning4) January 30, 2022
“When you assess the series of missile launches, you can deduce what (North Korea) seems to be saying,” said Yang Uk, a North Korea and military affairs expert at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, a private think-tank in Seoul, according to NBC.
“Since taking office, the Biden administration has been quite busy with various issues other than North Korea and so one aspect of these series of shows of military power is to attract President Biden’s attention,” Yang said, noting the administration’s focus on China and Russia — both nations with extensive nuclear armaments.
Another expert in the area agreed.
“It has been the same cycle repeating itself: North Korean provocations, followed by a round of negotiations and their collapse and a pause in diplomacy,” Cheon Seong-whun, a former head of the Korea Institute for National Unification, said, according to The New York Times. “North Korea is now starting the cycle all over again, raising tensions with missile provocations.”
“Its goal is to make the United States and its allies accept its nuclear arsenal as a fait accompli,” he said.
North Korea tests more missiles in January than all of 2021, including most powerful one in years https://t.co/eWY5g7W9C8
— Avitoa.com – News (@Codecanyon3) January 30, 2022
One commentator said the Biden administration’s most common response to aggression – sanctions – will not work here.
“This is a deeply isolated, autarkic economy,” John Delury, a professor of history at Yonsei University in Seoul, told The Times for its Jan. 27 report, referring to the official North Korean policy of “juche,” or self-sufficiency.
“No amount of sanctions could create the pressures that COVID created in the last two years. Yet, do we see North Korea begging and saying, ‘Take our weapons and give us some aid?’ The North Koreans will eat grass,” he said.
Original HerePosted by Tex |
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