Share

‘South Korea has a plan to annihilate Pyongyang’

Since its fourth nuclear test earlier this year, the North has fired a total of 22 ballistic missiles on 14 occasions, compared to 16 missiles launched during the 18-year reign of his father, Kim Jong Il. But they center on a technological mystery that has long bedeviled outside experts: How far has North Korea gotten in efforts to consistently shrink down nuclear warheads so they can fit on long-range missiles?

Advertisement

The U.S. special representative for North Korea policy, Sung Kim, said on Sunday that they would be “working very closely in the Security Council and beyond to come up with the strongest possible measure against North Korea’s latest actions”.

The North’s latest nuclear test, the most powerful to date, sparked worries the country is making headway in its push to develop small and sophisticated warheads to be topped on missiles.

A missile is launched during a drill at an undisclosed location in North Korea.

He also suggested that the USA may launch its own sanctions.

South Korea is pushing for more sanctions against Pyongyang to close what it says were loopholes left in the last United Nations Security Council resolution adopted in March.

With ripples from North Korea’s latest nuclear test continuing to spread throughout the region, speculation surfaced Monday that the communist state may be gearing up to detonate another fission device in defiance of global condemnation.

“In other words, the North’s capital city will be reduced to ashes and removed from the map”.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un provides field guidance during a fire drill of ballistic rockets by Hwasong artillery units of the KPA Strategic Force, in this undated photo released by North Korea’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) in Pyongyang September 6, 2016.

The latest test happened Friday.

The UAE has strongly condemned the nuclear test which was conducted by North Korea on Friday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation has said.

The UN Security Council denounced the test and said it would begin work on a resolution immediately, but Russian and Chinese officials said sanctions alone would not solve the dispute.

“North Korea is seeking to ideal its nuclear weapons and their delivery vehicles so they can hold the region and the world hostage under threat of nuclear strikes”.

But there are growing voices calling for the South to have its own nuclear weapons, despite government opposition.

There are also growing calls in the South for Seoul to ask the U.S. to once again deploy nuclear weapons on its territory.

Yonhap reported that bad weather had delayed the flight of an advanced U.S. B-1B bomber to the Korean peninsula, a show of strength and solidarity with ally Seoul, scheduled for Monday.

Advertisement

But a U.S. expert, based on power of the quake it triggered, said it could have be up to 30 kilotonnes.

South Korean shouts slogans during a rally denouncing North Korea's latest nuclear test in Seoul South Korea Monday Sept. 12 2016