North Korea blows up parts of inter-Korean roads in a symbolic display
of anger
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[October 15, 2024]
By HYUNG-JIN KIM and KIM TONG-HYUNG
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — In a symbolic display of anger, North Korea on
Tuesday blew up the northern section of unused roads that once linked it
with the South, with the rivals exchanging threats days after the North
claimed that its rival flew drones over its capital Pyongyang.
The roads’ choreographed demolition underlines North Korea’s growing
anger against South Korea’s conservative government. North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un has vowed to sever relations with South Korea and abandon
the goal of achieving peaceful Korean unification.
Observers say it’s unlikely Kim will launch a preemptive, large-scale
attack on South Korea because of fear that an almost certain massive
retaliation by the more superior forces of the United States and South
Korea would threaten Pyongyang's survival.
In response to the explosions, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said
its military fired within southern sections of the border as it
bolstered its readiness and surveillance posture. The statement did not
give details, but the move could have been an attempt to avert
cross-border fire by North Korea. It wasn't immediately known whether
North Korea responded.
South Korea’s Unification Ministry, which handles affairs with North
Korea, separately condemned the North’s detonations as a “highly
abnormal” and “regressive” measure that violates previous inter-Korean
agreements.
Video provided by South Korea’s military showed a cloud of white and
gray smoke emerging from the explosion at a road near the western border
town of Kaesong. North Korean trucks and excavators could be seen
clearing out debris. Another video showed smoke emerging from a coastal
road near the eastern border.
North Korea has a history of staging the choreographed destruction of
facilities on its own soil as a political message.
In 2020, North Korea blew up an empty, South Korean-built liaison office
building just north of the border in retaliation for South Korean
civilian leafleting campaigns. In 2018, North Korea demolished tunnels
at its nuclear testing site at the start of nuclear diplomacy with the
United States. In 2008, North Korea blew up a cooling tower at its main
nuclear complex when earlier disarmament-for-aid negotiations with
Washington and others were happening.
Destroying the roads, which were mainly built with South Korean money,
would be in line with leader Kim Jong Un’s order in January to abandon
the goal of peaceful Korean unification and formally designate South
Korea as the country’s “invariable principal enemy." That order
surprised many outside North Korea watchers because it seemed to break
from his predecessors’ long-cherished dreams of peacefully unifying the
Korean Peninsula on the North’s terms.
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A TV screen reports North Korea has blown up parts of northern side
of inter-Korean roads during a news program at Seoul Railway Station
in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)
Experts say Kim likely aims to diminish South Korea’s voice in the
regional nuclear standoff and seek direct dealings with the United
States. Kim may also hope to diminish South Korean cultural
influence and bolster his family's dynastic rule at home.
North Korea has accused South Korea of infiltrating drones to drop
propaganda leaflets over Pyongyang three times this month and
threatened to respond with force if it happened again. South Korea
has refused to confirm whether it sent drones but warned that North
Korea would face the end of its regime if the safety of South Korean
citizens is threatened.
Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of Kim Jong Un, said Tuesday that
North Korea has secured unspecified clear evidence that South Korean
“military gangsters” are behind the alleged drone flights. She
warned that South Korea “will have to pay a dear price.”
North Korea's state media reported Tuesday that Kim Jong Un laid out
unspecified tasks related to “immediate military action” and the
operation of his war deterrent during a meeting Monday. North
Korea's military earlier threatened to turn South Korea into “piles
of ashes," saying its frontline army units were ready to open fire.
During a previous era of inter-Korean detente in the 2000s, the two
Koreas reconnected two road routes and two rail tracks across their
heavily fortified border. But their operations were suspended as the
Koreas wrangled over North Korea’s nuclear program and other issues.
The South Korean Unification Ministry said the roads and the rail
links were built with South Korean materials and equipment worth
$132.9 million provided in the form of loans, and the North is still
obligated to pay back the aid.
Last week, North Korea said it would permanently block its border
with South Korea and build front-line defense structures. South
Korean officials said North Korea had been adding anti-tank barriers
and laying mines along the border since earlier this year. They said
North Korea has also planted mines and removed lamps along its
sections of the inter-Korean roads and taken out ties on the
northern side of the railways.
In recent years North Korea has performed a run of provocative
missile tests, and South Korea and the United States have expanded
military drills and cooperation.
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