North Korea on Thursday threatened unspecified retaliation after the US flew long-range bombers over South Korea during training with its forces, which North Korea views as practice for an attack against it.
The US flew the B-1B bombers Tuesday during an aerial drill with other US and South Korean fighter jets. South Korea's Defense Ministry had said the training was meant to show the two countries' combined deterrence capability against North Korea's advancing nuclear program.
The US and South Korea routinely hold joint military exercises they describe as defensive in nature. But North Korea views them as an invasion rehearsal and is particularly sensitive to the US mobilization of strategic assets such as long-range bombers, aircraft carriers and nuclear-powered submarines.
The recent military move of the US and the ROK is an open threat to the security of our state and a grave provocation that raises the military tension in the region to an extreme dangerous level, an unidentified spokesperson for North Korea's Defense Ministry said in a statement carried in state media.
ROK stands for the Republic of Korea, South Korea's formal name.
The statement warned the US action would inevitably hurt US security and said North Korea will deter by dint of powerful force the US aggressive attempt to permanently fix the malignant instability element in the security environment of the region.
North Korea often test-launches missiles in response to the US flyovers of B-1B bombers, which is capable of carrying a huge payload of conventional weapons.
Animosities on the Korean Peninsula are running high as North Korea continues weapons tests designed to modernize his nuclear arsenal and supports Russia's war against Ukraine by supplying weapons and troops.
Since his inauguration, President Donald Trump has repeatedly boasted of his personal ties with Kim and expressed his willingness to reach out to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to revive diplomacy.
On March 31, Trump called Kim a very smart guy and North Korea a big nuclear nation. Trump said he and Kim have a great relationship and that there is communication, though there are no known public negotiations and North Korea hasn't publicly responded to Trump's outreach.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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