COVID-wracked N.Korea may greet Biden with 'imminent' missile test
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[May 18, 2022] By
Josh Smith and Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - Despite battling a wave
of suspected COVID-19 infections, North Korea appears to be preparing to
test an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) ahead of U.S.
President Joe Biden's first trip to South Korea, South Korean and U.S.
officials said.
An ICBM test appeared imminent, Deputy National Security Adviser Kim
Tae-hyo told a briefing in Seoul.
"If there is a small or large North Korean provocation during the summit
period, we have prepared Plan B," he said.
That plan would secure the combined U.S. and South Korea military
forces' defence posture and command and control systems, even if it
requires changing the summit schedule, Kim said.
A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the
latest intelligence showed North Korea could carry out an ICBM test as
soon as Thursday or Friday.
Biden is expected to arrive in South Korea on Friday and hold talks with
his South Korean counterparts over several days before visiting Japan.
The White House said last week Biden was considering a trip to the
Demilitarized Zone on the border with North Korea, but Kim said that
seemed unlikely.
A weapons test could overshadow Biden's broader focus on China, trade,
and other regional issues, and underscore the lack of progress in
denuclearisation talks despite his administration's vow to break the
stalemate with practical approaches.
It could also complicate international efforts to offer Pyongyang aid as
it battles its first confirmed COVID outbreak.
The trip is Biden's first to the region as president, and will be the
first summit with South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, who took office
on May 10.
Yoon has vowed to take a harder line against North Korean
"provocations," and is expected to seek greater assurances from Biden
that the United States will strengthen its "extended deterrence" against
the North.
The Yoon administration has asked the United States to station more
nuclear-capable "strategic assets" such as long-range bombers,
submarines, and aircraft carriers in the region.
The chances of North Korea conducting a nuclear test this weekend appear
low, but if the North stages any major provocation, such assets are
ready to be mobilised, Kim said.
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un walks next to what state media
reports is the "Hwasong-17" intercontinental ballistic missile
(ICBM) on its launch vehicle in this undated photo released on March
25, 2022 by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). KCNA
via REUTERS/File Photo
U.S. officials had warned that the North could test a
nuclear weapon around the visit, and the State Department said on
Tuesday there is no expectation that the COVID outbreak would change
Pyongyang's determination to eventually resume nuclear testing,
paused since 2017.
"Even as (North Korea) continues to refuse the donation of ...
apparently much-needed COVID vaccines, they continue to invest
untold sums in ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programmes that
do nothing to alleviate the humanitarian plight of the North Korean
people," State Department spokesman Ned Price told a briefing.
A new report by the U.S.-based Center for International and
Strategic Studies (CSIS) said commercial satellite imagery shows
work continuing at the nuclear site, whose underground testing
tunnels were shuttered in 2018 after leader Kim Jong Un declared a
moratorium on nuclear and ICBM tests.
He has since said that the country is no longer bound by that
moratorium because of a lack of progress in talks with the United
States. The North resumed testing ICBMs in March.
"The timing of this test rests solely within the hands of Kim Jong
Un," the CSIS report on the nuclear site said.
North Korea has also resumed construction at a long-dormant nuclear
reactor that would increase its production of plutonium for nuclear
weapons by a factor of 10, researchers at the U.S.-based James
Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) reported last week,
citing satellite imagery.
Analysts say that even if North Korea tests a weapon, South Korea
and the United States should offer unconditional COVID aid.
North Korea sent aircraft to China to pick up medical supplies days
after it confirmed its first COVID-19 outbreak, media reported on
Tuesday, but Pyongyang has yet to respond to offers of aid from
South Korea. Washington says that it supports providing assistance
to North Korea, but that there were no current plans to provide
vaccines.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali in Washington and Josh Smith in Seoul;
Additional reporting by Soo-hyang Choi. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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