U.S. Holds War Games With Allies As North Korea Vows to Wipe Enemies Off the Earth
Two
warships of a major U.S. Navy formation joined Washington allies South
Korea and Japan for simultaneous, bilateral military exercises Tuesday
as tensions flared in the Asia-Pacific region. Miles in between the two
war drills, North Korea held its own military tests in defiance of
threats suggesting potential military action against the government of
Kim Jong Un by President Donald Trump and his administration.
The Navy's Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer Wayne E. Meyer conducted maritime military drills with South Korea's Chungmugong Yi Sun-sin-class multirole guided-missile destroyer Wang Geon in the waters west of the Korean Peninsula, according to a statement released Tuesday by the Navy's Seventh Fleet. At the same time, a second Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer, Fitzgerald, began naval exercises with Japan's Kongo-class guided-missile destroyer Chokai in
the sea west of Japan. Both Navy ships were part of the Carl Vinson
Carrier Strike group recently dispatched to the Western Pacific amid
reports that North Korea may perform its sixth nuclear weapons test,
something that the White House has vowed to prevent from happening.
North
Korea's drills were accompanied by heated rhetoric from officials and
proliferated through its state-run media outlets. "It is the will of the
service personnel and people of the DPRK to stage a death-defying
resistance to wipe out the aggressors and provocateurs by reacting to
their total war with an all-out war and their nuclear war with
Korean-style nuclear strikes of annihilation. It is also their
resolution to surely win a victory," a statement attributed to the
spokesperson of North Korea's Agricultural Workers Union read, according
to Pyongyang's official Korean Central News Agency.
"If the enemies dare opt for the military adventure despite our repeated
warnings, our armed forces will wipe the strongholds of aggression off
the surface of the earth through powerful preemptive nuclear attacks,"
North Korea's Defense Minister Pak Yong Sik said in a televised address
to the nation's political and military elite, according to The Washington Post.
A day before both sides brandished the maneuverability of their armed forces, the Navy's Ohio-class guided-missile submarine Michigan docked
in the South Korean port city of Busan. The nuclear-powered sub, armed
with 154 Tomahawk cruise missiles, arrived Monday in preparation for the
appearance of the entire Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group, which North
Korea has called a provocation in increasingly acrimonious terms. Pyongyang has vowed to use its entire arsenal,
estimated at about 1,000 ballistic missiles and between 10 and 20
nuclear warheads, in response to any military action by the U.S. or its
allies.
The White House announced Monday it would summon all 100 U.S. senators to the White House Wednesday in a rare briefing
hosted by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Secretary of Defense James
Mattis, Director of National Intelligence Dan Coast and Joseph Dunford,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on North Korea. The upcoming
meeting has drawn much speculation as to what the Trump administration
had in store for lawmakers in regard to U.S. policy in North Korea amid
the ongoing crisis in the region.
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