South Korean conservative activists burn the effigies of North Korea's late president Kim Il-Sung and his late son Kim Jong-Il during a rally in Seoul yesterday to mark the third anniversary of the 2010 sinking of the naval vessel Cheonan.
SEOUL: North Korea’s military put its “strategic” rocket units on a war footing yesterday, with a fresh threat to strike targets on the US mainland, Hawaii and Guam, as well as South Korea.
The move came as South Korea marked the third anniversary of the sinking of its naval vessel “Cheonan” by what Seoul insists was a North Korean submarine.
“All artillery troops including strategic rocket units and long-range artillery units are to be placed under class-A combat readiness,” the Korean People’s Army (KPA) supreme command said in a statement.
The units should be prepared to attack “all US military bases in the Asia-Pacific region, including the US mainland, Hawaii and Guam” and South Korea, said the statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency.
Despite a successful long-range rocket launch in December, most experts believe North Korea is years from developing a genuine inter-continental ballistic missile that could strike the mainland United States.
Hawaii and Guam would also be outside the range of its medium-range missiles, which would be capable, however, of striking US bases in South Korea and Japan.
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has spent the past few weeks touring frontline military units, monitoring live fire artillery drills and making inflammatory speeches about wiping out the enemy.
“We are closely monitoring the situation. So far there has been no particular North Korean troop movement,” a South Korean defence ministry spokesman said.
Addressing a ceremony for the 46 sailors who died in the 2010 Cheonan incident, South Korean President Park Geun-Hye warned Pyongyang that its only “path to survival” lay in abandoning its nuclear and missile programmes.
The North has always denied sinking the Cheonan, but a few months later it launched an artillery attack on a South Korean border island, killing four people.
Military tensions on the Korean peninsula have been at an elevated level for months, following December’s rocket launch and the North’s third nuclear test which it carried out last month. Both triggered UN sanctions that infuriated the North, which has spent the past month issuing increasingly threatening statements about unleashing an “all-out war” backed by nuclear weapons.
It was particularly incensed that nuclear-capable US B-52 bombers flying out of Andersen Air base on Guam took part in recent joint South Korea-US military exercises.
The latest threat came days after the South Korean and US militaries signed a new pact, envisaging a joint military response to even low-level provocation by North Korea.
While existing agreements provide for US engagement in the event of a full-scale conflict, the new protocol addresses the response to a limited provocation such as an isolated incident of cross-border shelling.
It guarantees US support for any South Korean retaliation and allows Seoul to request any additional US military force it deems necessary.
In an open letter to troops published to mark the Cheonan anniversary, South Korea’s, Kim Kwan-Jin, said there was a “high possibility” the North’s threats might be translated into action.
He also reiterated that South Korea’s response to any provocation would not only target the origin of the attack, “but also its supporting and commanding forces.”
Specialist anti-North Korean websites and organisations run by defectors in South Korea said they were the victims of a coordinated cyber attack.
Free North Korea Radio, Daily NK and North Korea Intellectuals Solidarity, all operated by defectors, said their servers crashed simultaneously on Tuesday afternoon.
Agencies