U.S. defense secretary promises 'massive military response' to North Korea strike
U.S. defense secretary promises 'massive
military response' to North Korea strike
'Any use of nuclear weapons by the North will be met with a massive military response that is effective and overwhelming'
SEOUL, South Korea – Speaking after a meeting with senior
South Korean defense officials on Saturday, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
offered unequivocal support for American allies in the face of threats from
North Korea.
“Understood,” Mattis responded,
according to Reuters.
Many analysts have suggested it would be difficult and time-consuming to destroy these weapons if war broke out. “When it comes to the artillery, there’s nothing we can do against the artillery directly to prevent bombardment of Seoul,” said Van Jackson, an expert on North Korean security issues at Victoria University in New Zealand.
Despite these concerns, the Trump administration has downplayed the threat posed to the South Korean capital. In September, when asked if there was any military options on the table that would not put Seoul at grave risk, Mattis said that there were, “but I will not go into details.”
Asked about the possibility of a preventive strike on North Korea, Mattis told reporters on Saturday there were many different military options that “realistically reduce that threat [to South Korea] as low as possible.”
Robert E. Kelly, an expert on North Korea at Pusan National University in South Korea, said it was not clear what options Mattis was referring to. “The military option is traditionally considered really risky,” Kelly wrote in an email.
Jackson said there are “a couple of military options [against North Korea]
that wouldn’t necessitate retaliation against Seoul,” such as a limited strike
or covert operation.
Mattis is in South Korea as part of a week-long Asia trip. The visit, his second since taking office in January, comes after a number of provocative moves by the North Korean military, including a number of missile launches and a nuclear test in early September. Last week, a North Korean official reiterated a threat to stage an atmospheric nuclear test over the Pacific Ocean, telling CNN the warnings should be taken “literally.”
“North Korea has accelerated the threat that it poses to its neighbors and the world through its illegal and unnecessary missile and nuclear weapons programs,” Mattis told reporters on Saturday, adding that he could not imagine a “condition under which the United States would accept North Korea as a nuclear power.”
However, Mattis reiterated that the military options being considered were “designed to buttress diplomats’ efforts to maintain a deterrent stance and denuclearize the peninsula.”