WAR North Korea news/watch thread under new Military leadership...and maybe not a good thing

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Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
North Korea recently replaced their old hard-line Defense Chief with a younger unknown. Some people thought it would be a "good" thing, but I'm not so sure.

I believe they bare watching now more than ever. I don't think they will continue playing under the old "pay us off or we'll...." rules. Less bluffing from them in our future I believe. I hope I'm wrong.

I am attacing the original NK news/watch thread, lots of good info in there and I want to be able to "quickly" (relatively anyway) be able to compare how they do things now compared to under the old leadership.

New Dear Leader, new Military guy...good thing? bad thing?



ORIGINAL THREAD

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?426141-N.-Korea-news-watch-thread
 
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Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
The beginning of the new chapter/game...brought over from Original Thread above.


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05-12-2013 09:46 PM #1957 Lilbitsnana

might bear watching, I wonder if this will change things.


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA3m
#ROK MND spokesman says closely tracing trend of #DPRK military after announcement of new armed forces minister in Pyongyang.

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05-12-2013 09:49 PM #1958 Lilbitsnana

Steve Hermanþ@W7VOA14m
#ROK MND spokesman says closely tracing trend of #DPRK military after announcement of new armed forces minister in Pyongyang.

Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt

Luke Hermanþ@luke_herman23m
Jang was formerly commander of the KPA First Corps http://www.kcna.co.jp/item/2012/2012...1217-17ee.html
Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt





posted for fair use


2013/05/13 10:19 KST

N. Korea replaces hawkish armed forces minister

SEOUL, May 13 (Yonhap) -- North Korea replaced its hard-line armed forces minister with a relatively "young" and unknown field commander, a news report said Monday, in a move that may signal a shift in the country's confrontational policies.

According to the report by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) monitored in Seoul, Jang Jong-nam, in his 50s, was introduced as minister of the People's Armed Forces during the Song and Dance Ensemble of the Korean People's Internal Security Force that was attended by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and his wife Ri Sol-ju.


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news...001900315.HTML

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05-12-2013 10:00 PM #1959 Lilbitsnana

And then there's this...

Steve Herman‏@W7VOA12m
#ROK MND officials: Premature to say whether #DPRK KPA hardliners being replaced but there's evidence of shift to younger top brass.

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Yeah, NK has upped the rhetoric since the Nimitz is in the area conducting exercises, but that was expected.

I haven't been posting the stuff from NK, but will post a few.


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA18h
#DPRK commentary: U.S. prides itself on nuclear hardware including (USS) Nimitz but bigger the target, the easier it becomes to destroy.



Steve Herman‏@W7VOA18h
The fresh threats carried in Rodong Sinmun, on KCNA wire & aired by Pyongyang central radio today.



Steve Herman‏@W7VOA18h
N. Korean broadcast: "Victory awaits #DPRK in the unavoidable do-or-die battle with the U.S. imperialists that will flare up any day."


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA18h
#DPRK media: Strongholds of brigandish U.S. imperialists top list of DPRK's ICBM targets. KPA Strategic Rocket Force awaiting launch order.

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05-16-2013 09:29 PM #1962 Lilbitsnana

posted for fair use


2013/05/17 11:06 KST


N. Korea thought to have 200 mobile missile launchers: report

SEOUL, May 17 (Yonhap) -- North Korea could have as many as 200 mobile missile launchers, a report showed Friday, nearly double the number previously estimated by Seoul authorities.

According to the report submitted to the U.S. Congress by the Pentagon, North Korea appears to have accumulated up to 200 so-called transporter erector launchers (TEL), including up to 100 for short-range Scud missiles, 50 for medium-range Nodong missiles and 50 for long-range Musudan missiles, the state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses (KIDA) said.

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news...001300315.HTML

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Today 02:14 AM #1963 Lilbitsnana


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/nort...002400315.HTML

2013/05/18 16:08 KST



(URGENT) N. Korea launches three short-range guided missiles: officials


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Today 02:21 AM #1964 Lilbitsnana

Originally Posted by Lilbitsnana
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/nort...002400315.HTML

2013/05/18 16:08 KST




(URGENT) N. Korea launches three short-range guided missiles: officials

I'm thinking they might not "bluff" so much in the future with the new guy.

It only took them a little over an hour after making the condemnation statement over US tests to fire off their own missile tests.



2013/05/18 14:50 KST[/B]

N. Korea denounces U.S. ICBM test plan as military provocation

SEOUL, May 18 (Yonhap) -- North Korea on Saturday denounced a possible move by the United States to test fire an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) later in the month, calling it a serious military provocation.

The Rodong Sinmun, an organ of the ruling Workers’Party of Korea said in a article monitored in Seoul, the launch, if it takes place, will be an insult to the international community and a direct threat to Pyongyang
.

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/nort...002200315.HTML

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Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use

http://www.rfa.org/english/news/korea/aid-05142013155650.html

China Sends Aid to North Korea Despite Sanctions


2013-05-14

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An undated picture released by the Korean Central News Agency on April 24, 2013 shows Prime Minister Pak Pong Ju (C) inspecting a farm in South Hwanghae province.
AFP PHOTO / KCNA VIA KNS




China is providing large amounts of fertilizer to its ally North Korea and plans to send food aid to the impoverished nation, according to sources inside the country, despite backing international sanctions meant to punish the regime for pursuing its nuclear weapons program.

North Korean sources told RFA’s Korean Service that Beijing had delivered fertilizer to assist in collective farm production even earlier this year than it had in years past—and in larger quantities.

The aid follows Chinese support for tighter restrictions on the North's financial activities as part of stiff sanctions levied by the United Nations against Pyongyang in March for conducting its third illicit nuclear test a month earlier.

“The Chinese government gave fertilizer much earlier than last time,” a source who works for the agricultural department of North Hamgyong province said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“Based on the amount of distributions to each collective farm, I think the overall amount of the fertilizer exceeds 200,000 tons,” he said.

The source did not provide details of when China delivered fertilizer last year or the amount it had donated.

But a farmer from Yanggang province told RFA that this year Beijing had sent fertilizer to North Korea, which faces chronic food shortages, more than a month earlier than it had in 2012.

“Last year, I was provided with fertilizer that came from China around June 10,” the farmer said.

“[At that time] each collective farm only received 10 tons of the fertilizer, which was a really tiny amount.”

The farmer said that this year China had begun delivering fertilizer as early as April 26.

An official of the trading department in North Pyongan province told RFA that all fertilizer deliveries from China had been processed through the customs department in the provincial capital Sinuiju, which lies across the border from Dandong city in China’s Liaoning province.

He said that all of the shipments were designated as free aid from the Chinese government and had arrived at the border via train and container truck.

“Our trade department doesn’t normally import such a large amount of fertilizer at once, but the trade department of each province has been ordered to stock up to 200 tons of fertilizer,” he said.

“I was informed that China will also send food aid soon. Since Pyongyang already knew the aid would be coming, the government has already begun distributing food held in storage to the North Korean people,” he added.

Two-pronged approach

The sources RFA spoke to in North Korea said they found it hard to believe recent reports they had heard from South Korean media about Beijing supporting international sanctions against Pyongyang because of the ongoing trade.

The sanctions do not bar other countries from sending food and other forms of aid to North Korea, but prohibit financial interactions with North Korea in a bid to further isolate the country and pressure it to give up its nuclear weapons program.

China is impoverished North Korea's main diplomatic and economic ally but has shown growing irritation with Pyongyang's war threats, and in March backed tough U.N. sanctions against the hardline communist neighbor for its defiant nuclear and missile tests.

Reports that China is providing large-scale aid to North Korea suggest that Beijing may be taking a two-pronged approach to reining in its bellicose southern neighbor—scolding Pyongyang on the international stage, while supporting the North bilaterally.

“Trade between North Korea and China is very much active,” the farmer from Yanggang province said.

“They have even built a new customs house in Yanggang’s Samjiyon district,” he said.

The farmer added that smuggling across the Yalu River, which lies along the border between the two countries, “is still carried out extensively.”

“Farmers had traded 2 kilograms [4.4 pounds] of corn for 1 kilogram [2.2 pounds] of Chinese fertilizer until few days ago,” he said.

“But since the new fertilizer has arrived from the Chinese government, they now trade them one to one.”

Pressing China

Last week, the state-run Bank of China Ltd.—which Washington has accused of financing Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear programs—said it had halted business with North Korea’s Chosun Trade Bank.

U.S. Special Representative for North Korea Policy Glyn Davies on Monday called the decision a “very hopeful sign” in efforts to end the North’s nuclear ambitions, but added it is not yet clear whether the move signifies a real shift in Beijing’s approach to dealing with Pyongyang.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, on a visit to the region, said last month that it was up to China to “put some teeth” into efforts to press North Korea to abandon its nuclear program.

Reported by Sung Hui Moon for RFA’s Korean Service. Translated by Goeun Yu. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.





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Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use

North Korea Defense Minister Kim Kyok Sik Replaced With Jang Jong Nam


By HYUNG-JIN KIM 05/13/13 05:46 AM ET EDT

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SEOUL, South Korea -- North Korea has replaced its hard-line defense minister with a little-known army general, according to a state media report Monday, in what outside analysts call an attempt to install a younger figure meant to solidify leader Kim Jong Un's grip on the powerful military.

Jang Jong Nam's appointment is the latest move since Kim succeeded his late father in late 2011 that observers see as a young leader trying to consolidate control. The announcement comes amid easing animosities after weeks of warlike threats between the rivals, including North Korean vows of nuclear strikes.

Pyongyang's rhetorical outbursts against massive U.S.-South Korean war drills and U.N. sanctions over the North's February nuclear test were seen, in part, as a push to portray Kim at home as a respected military commander on the world stage.

Jang's new role as minister of the People's Armed Forces, however, isn't thought to indicate a potential softening of Pyongyang's stance toward Seoul and Washington any time soon, analysts said. Jang replaces Kim Kyok Sik, the former commander of battalions believed responsible for attacks on South Korea in 2010 that killed 50 South Koreans. Outsiders don't know much about Jang, but analysts said it's unlikely that Kim Jong Un would name a moderate to the post at a time of tension with the outside world.

Mention of Jang's new role was buried in a state media dispatch listing those who attended an art performance with the young leader. It's not known exactly when Jang was formally appointed to the ministerial post.

The announcement coincided with the beginning Monday of U.S.-South Korean naval exercises involving a nuclear-powered U.S. aircraft carrier. North Korea has criticized the carrier's inclusion in the two-day drills, which it claims are preparations for an invasion of the North.

Also, when tensions peaked in March, Washington took the unusual step of announcing that nuclear-capable B-52 and B-2 bombers had participated in the earlier, larger-scale joint drills between the allies. North Korea regularly cites the powerful U.S. nuclear arsenal and Washington's deployment of those assets in the region as justification for its own pursuit of nuclear weapons.

One of the most notable changes Kim Jong Un has made was the replacement of the powerful military chief, Ri Yong Ho, who was dismissed last July because of what Pyongyang called an unspecified illness. Outside observers speculated that Ri, the military's General Staff chief, was purged as Kim tried to put his stamp on his government. Ri was also replaced by a little-known general. The military chief is considered a higher ranking position than the defense minister.

State media previously identified Jang as head of the army's First Corps and said he pledged allegiance to Kim and threatened South Korea in a speech last December. Jang was quoted as saying that his corps would annihilate its enemies and "turn each ravine into their death pitfall when the hour of decisive battle comes."




Kim appears to be naming someone from a new generation to bolster his rule of the 1.2 million-member military, said Chang Yong Seok at the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies at Seoul National University.

Jang is believed to be in 50s, while his predecessor, Kim Kyok Sik, is in his early 70s, according to Seoul's Unification Ministry, which is responsible for dealings with the North. Kim was appointed to the ministerial job last year, but Chang portrayed him as belonging more to the era of Kim Jong Il.

Because outsiders know so little about Jang, it remains to be seen whether his appointment will lead to Pyongyang refraining from attacking South Korea, Chang said.

Cheong Seong-chang, an analyst at the private Sejong Institute in South Korea, said it's unlikely that Jang is a moderate. A moderate figure appointed defense minister after weeks of high tension with the outside world could trigger whispers at home that the North is surrendering to Seoul and Washington, he said.


Also on HuffPost:
Kim Jong-Un: North Korea's Mysterious Master
1 of 13

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...ik-replaced-with-jang-jong-nam_n_3265369.html
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Steve Herman‏@W7VOA44m
#ROK media reporting what #DPRK launched were shore-based anti-ship missiles.




Steve Herman‏@W7VOA47m
Kyodo: #Japan says #DPRK missiles did not fall into Japanese waters.




Steve Herman‏@W7VOA49m
#ROK MND: #DPRK launched 2 short-range missiles Sat. AM & 1 in PM. #Korea


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA51m
No indication #DPRK launched any MEDIUM range (i.e. "Musudan" type) missiles today.


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA1h
Yonhap says #DPRK launched 3 short-range missiles into East Sea (aka Sea of Japan).
12:18 AM - 18 May 13 · Details


Tyler‏@CreatingTyler1h
@W7VOA Your thoughts?


Eric‏@thaicam1h
RT @W7VOA: Yonhap says #DPRK launched 3 short-range missiles into East Sea (aka Sea of Japan).

Steve Herman‏@W7VOA1h
#DPRK reported to have launched some short-range missiles into sea. #Korea
12:18 AM - 18 May 13 · Details

Sébastien Jaime‏@sebjaime1h
#NorthKorea RT @W7VOA #DPRK reported to have launched some short-range missiles into sea. #Korea

Mark MacKinnon/马凯‏@markmackinnon1h
MT @W7VOA: North Korea reported to have launched some short-range missiles into sea.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
2013/05/18 04:40 KST


Obama to replace chief of U.S. Forces Korea


By Lee Chi-dong
WASHINGTON, May 17 (Yonhap) -- President Barack Obama plans to replace the top commander of U.S. forces in Korea, the Pentagon announced Friday, a move that comes as North Korea shows no signs of returning to dialogue aimed at easing military tensions and denuclearizing the peninsula.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the Pentagon would promote Lt. Gen. Curtis ``Mike'' Scaparrotti to the rank of a four-star general to serve as commander of the 28,500 troops in South Korea. The nomination requires Senate confirmation.

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/18/0200000000AEN20130518000100315.HTML

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2013/05/18 05:22 KST

U.S. says OPCON transfer plan on track but not guaranteed

By Lee Chi-dong
WASHINGTON, May 17 (Yonhap) -- The U.S. scheme to transfer wartime operational control (OPCON) of South Korean troops back to Seoul remains on track but it is uncertain whether the allies will be fully ready for the agreed-upon target date -- Dec. 1, 2015, a U.S. official said earlier this week.

"The timeline is, of course -- we expect it to be on track, but at the end of the day we have to be sure it is safe and it is secure to transfer that," Joseph Yun, acting assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, told a congressional hearing on Thursday, according to a formal transcript.


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/18/0200000000AEN20130518000200315.HTML

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2013/05/18 05:37 KST



(LEAD) Obama to replace chief of U.S. Forces Korea


By Lee Chi-dong
WASHINGTON, May 17 (Yonhap) -- President Barack Obama plans to replace the top commander of U.S. forces in Korea, the Pentagon announced Friday, a move that comes as North Korea shows no signs of returning to dialogue aimed at easing military tensions and denuclearizing the peninsula.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said the Pentagon would promote Lt. Gen. Curtis ``Mike'' Scaparrotti, formerly deputy commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, to the rank of a four-star general to serve as commander of the 28,500 troops in South Korea. The nomination requires Senate confirmation.


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/18/0200000000AEN20130518000300315.HTML
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
stella2songhee: #DPRK seems 2 have fired KN-02, a ballistic missile n not cruise missile , a govt official said into Northeastern waters off their shore

Sat May 18 - 3:45:51 am


PamelaFalk: North Korea #DPRK fired 3 short-range missiles after UN panel says sanctions working @CBSNews @CBSRadioNews

Sat May 18 - 3:46:41 am
 

MichaelUK

Senior Member
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2326507/North-Korea-fires-short-range-missiles-eastern-waters--defence-spokesman-claims.html


‘North Korea fires three-short range missiles into eastern waters’, defence spokesman claims

Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said the North fired three missiles today
North Korea tested two short-range missiles in March

By Tara Brady

PUBLISHED: 10:04, 18 May 2013 | UPDATED: 11:05, 18 May 2013

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South Korea has accused North Korea of firing three short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters.

Defence Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said the North fired three missiles today and that its intent was unclear.

In March, North Korea tested two short-range missiles off its east coast.
South Korea has accused North Korea of firing three short-range guided missiles into its eastern waters


U.S. officials say North Korea recently withdrew two mid-range missiles believed to be capable of reaching Guam after moving them to the east coast earlier this year.

Meanwhile, North Korea is still trying to import and export nuclear and ballistic missile-related items but financial and trade sanctions are slowing progress on development of their prohibited weapons, UN experts say in a new report.


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Key parts of the expert panel's report provide further information on North Korea's attempts to evade four rounds of increasingly tough UN sanctions aimed at reining in its development of nuclear weapons and the ballistic missiles to deliver them.

While the imposition of sanctions has not halted these programmes, the panel said, 'it has in all likelihood considerably delayed the (North's) timetable, and through the imposition of financial sanctions and the bans on the trade in weapons, has choked off significant funding which would have been channelled into prohibited activities'.
Defence Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said the North fired three missiles today and that its intent was unclear

Defence Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said the North fired three missiles today
North Korean soldiers take part in a shooting drill in an unknown location in April

North Korean soldiers take part in a shooting drill in an unknown location in April

The report to the UN Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against North Korea recommended imposing sanctions on four additional North Korean companies and 11 individuals.

The council discussed the experts' report on Thursday and it will be up to members to decide whether they are added to the sanctions blacklist.

To increase pressure on Kim Jong Un's regime, the United States and the European Union have gone beyond UN sanctions and imposed even tougher financial measures against North Korea.

China, which is Pyongyang's closest ally and economic lifeline, supported the UN sanctions.

In a sign of growing discontent with the North, the state-run Bank of China, one of the country's largest, halted business earlier this month with a North Korean bank accused by the US of financing Pyongyang's missile and nuclear programs.
To increase pressure on Kim Jong Un's regime, the United States and the European Union have gone beyond UN sanctions and imposed even tougher financial measures against North Korea

To increase pressure on Kim Jong Un's regime, the United States and the European Union have gone beyond UN sanctions and imposed even tougher financial measures against North Korea

The panel said North Korea 'has continued to defy the international community in a series of actions which has heightened concerns about its intentions'.

It cited the North's ballistic missile launch on December 12, its third nuclear test on February 12, and its declaration that it would reactivate nuclear facilities at its Yongbyon nuclear complex.

'The DPRK has continued its efforts to import and export items relevant to missile and nuclear programs and arms,' the panel said, using the initials of the country's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

The report listed North Korean sanctions violations over a five-year period including the seizure of aluminum alloys suspected to be nuclear related in August 2012, and the seizure of missile-related items bound for Syria in May 2012.

Given the North's 'consistent sanctions evasion,' the panel recommended that the country's newly created Ministry of Atomic Energy Industry and its minister, who has not yet been named, be added to the sanctions list.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...--defence-spokesman-claims.html#ixzz2TdtT4HJV
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news...north-koreas-nuclear-program/article12011764/


UN panel says sanctions delaying development of North Korea’s nuclear program

Edith M. Lederer
The Associated Press
Published Friday, May. 17 2013, 11:34 PM EDT
Last updated Friday, May. 17 2013, 11:34 PM EDT

North Korea is still trying to import and export nuclear and ballistic missile-related items but financial and trade sanctions are slowing progress on development of their prohibited weapons, U.N. experts say in a new report.

Key parts of the expert panel’s report, obtained Friday by the Associated Press, provide further information on North Korea’s attempts to evade four rounds of increasingly tough U.N. sanctions aimed at reining in its development of nuclear weapons and the ballistic missiles to deliver them.

While the imposition of sanctions has not halted these programs, the panel said, “it has in all likelihood considerably delayed the (North’s) timetable, and through the imposition of financial sanctions and the bans on the trade in weapons, has choked off significant funding which would have been channeled into prohibited activities.”

The report to the U.N. Security Council committee monitoring sanctions against North Korea recommended imposing sanctions on four additional North Korean companies and 11 individuals.

The council discussed the experts’ report on Thursday and it will be up to members to decide whether they are added to the sanctions blacklist.

To increase pressure on Kim Jong Un’s regime, the United States and the European Union have gone beyond U.N. sanctions and imposed even tougher financial measures against North Korea.

China, which is Pyongyang’s closest ally and economic lifeline, supported the U.N. sanctions. In a sign of growing discontent with the North, the state-run Bank of China Ltd., one of the country’s largest, halted business earlier this month with a North Korean bank accused by the U.S. of financing Pyongyang’s missile and nuclear programs.

The panel said North Korea “has continued to defy the international community in a series of actions which has heightened concerns about its intentions.” It cited the North’s ballistic missile launch on Dec. 12, its third nuclear test on Feb. 12, and its declaration that it would reactivate nuclear facilities at its Yongbyon nuclear complex.

“The DPRK has continued its efforts to import and export items relevant to missile and nuclear programs and arms,” the panel said, using the initials of the country’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

The report listed North Korean sanctions violations over a five-year period including the seizure of aluminum alloys suspected to be nuclear related in August 2012, and the seizure of missile-related items bound for Syria in May 2012.

In 2011, it said North Korea attempted to procure missile technology, sophisticated computer tools, and parts for MiG-21 jets in violation of sanctions. In 2010, arms-related material bound for Syria was seized and in 2008 rocket fuses bound for Iran were confiscated, it said.

Given the North’s “consistent sanctions evasion,” the panel recommended that the country’s newly created Ministry of Atomic Energy Industry and its minister, who has not yet been named, be added to the sanctions list.

For violating the ballistic missile ban, it recommended adding the Munitions Industry Department of the Central Committee of the Korean Workers Party and the State Space Development Bureau.

The panel also recommended sanctions against the Hesong Trading Corporation, a subsidiary of the Korea Mining Development Trading Corp., which was involved in trying to sell 70 North Korean portable anti-aircraft missiles to Azerbaijan. British arms dealer Michael Ranger was convicted in July 2012 of attempting to sell the missiles, and the panel also recommended that the U.N. put his primary contact at Hesong, O Hak-Chol, on the sanctions list.

The panel said it had closed its investigation into Thailand’s seizure of an arms shipment from a plane originating in North Korea in 2009 that was valued at over US$ 16 million. It recommended sanctions against Alexander Zykov of Kazakhstan and Ukrainians Iurii Lunov and Igor Karev-Popov, who were involved in the arms transfer.

Given the DPRK’s continued development of its nuclear programs, the panel urged that key items, especially for uranium enrichment, be subject to sanctions including high-strength steel and aluminum alloy, frequency changers, fibrous or filamentary materials, ring magnets, and semi-hard magnetic alloys in thin strip form.

The panel noted that 96 countries — under 50 per cent of the 193 U.N. member states — have submitted reports on their implementation of sanctions against North Korea.

“Regrettably, the level of detail given in many of these is insufficient to judge if domestic legislation is sufficient to effectively enforce the sanctions,” it said.

More Related to this Story

diplomacy Canada to skip disarmament talks in snub to Iran

North Korea replaces hard-line defence chief with younger general

finance Chinese state bank cuts off business with Pyongyang
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH3h
DPRK specific mentioning of planned LGM-30 test launch first indication that they would use said test launch as excuse to conduct own test.


imagestreampress‏@imagestrmpress3h
@ISNJH so be it. The US needs to be resolute in our need for self defense. Regular verification tests are an essential part of readiness.

Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH3h
@imagestrmpress x2 and its unlikely DOD will delay the test again after already putting the test off once already.
3:41 PM - 18 May 13 · Details


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH3h
If indeed the case then nearer to date of US test we will likely see a statement coming from DPRK that if it happens DPRK will do so also.




LibertyBots‏@LibertyBots20146h
@ISNJH When was the test?

Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH5h
@LibertyBots2014 last night.



Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH6h
#DPRK missile tests come right following trip by Isao Iijima special adviser to #Japan's PM


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH6h
although the missiles tested by DPRK are short range missiles & not the Rodong or Musudan missiles it might indicate DPRK stepping up again.



Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH9h
#DPRK denounces planned US test of LGM-30 later in month & brands planned test as a "serious military provocation
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2013/05/18/86/0401000000AEN20130518002200315F.HTML


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH10h
Testing of the three missiles is likely going to increase monitoring to determine if DRPK will be conducting other rounds of tests.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Steve Herman‏@W7VOA7m
RT @YonhapNews: #ROK deploys Israeli missiles to protect border islands amid #DPRK threat - http://bit.ly/19Nzax0 #Korea


posted for fair use


2013/05/19 11:38 KST

S. Korea deploys Israeli missiles to protect border islands

SEOUL, May 19 (Yonhap) -- South Korea has placed Israeli precision-guided missiles capable of striking North Korean coastal artillery on its Yellow Sea border islands, a military official said Sunday.

"Dozens of Spike missiles and their launchers have recently been deployed on Baengnyeong and Yeonpyeong islands," an official for the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said. "They can destroy (North Korea's) underground facilities and can pursue and strike moving targets."

The satellite-guided Spike missile has a range of about 20 kilometers and weighs 70 kilograms, according to military officials. Yeonpyeong lies just 11㎞ from North Korean shores.


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/19/0200000000AEN20130519000900315.HTML
 
Last edited:

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use

The Korea Herald > National > Defense

S. Korea deploys Israeli missiles to protect border islands


Published : 2013-05-19 12:20
Updated : 2013-05-19 12:20


South Korea has placed Israeli precision-guided missiles capable of striking North Korean coastal artillery on its Yellow Sea border islands, a military official said Sunday.

"Dozens of Spike missiles and their launchers have recently been deployed on Baengnyeong and Yeonpyeong islands," an official for the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said. "They can destroy (North Korea's) underground facilities and can pursue and strike moving targets."

The satellite-guided Spike missile has a range of about 20 kilometers and weighs 70 kilograms, according to military officials. Yeonpyeong lies just 11‡q from North Korean shores.

Officials also said North Korea has set up 76.2-millimeter coastal guns, each with a range of 12‡q, on the coast northwest of Baengnyeong and Yeonpyeong. The North has also deployed 122-mm multiple rocket launchers, which have a 20-‡q range, on land.

According to officials, Spike missiles had been scheduled to be deployed in late 2012 but delayed test-firing pushed back the timetable by half a year.

North Korea on Saturday launched three short-range missiles into the sea off the Korean Peninsula's east coast. The latest firing came about two weeks after Pyongyang withdrew two Musudan intermediate-range missiles it had deployed on its east coast in early April, along with medium-range Rodong missiles. They were deployed in an apparent protest of joint South Korea-U.S. military exercises.

The North has yet to comment on Saturday's launches. South Korean experts and officials said the North may have been carrying out a military exercise, while others speculated that Pyongyang appears to be trying to escalate tensions in the region and draw attention from the United States and the international community. (Yonhap News)


http://www.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20130519000178
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Syria goes then Dear Leader will attack South Korea and World War Three will have started.

Did you see what I posted on the WOW thread last night about Syria setting up missiles to strike Israel if Syria is attacked? http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...*WINDS****of****WAR****&p=4841011#post4841011

I see that ST posted a thread about it on main just a bit ago too.

Dear Leader might join in, but I believe WWIII will have started just before that, as in as soon as we (or someone) attacks Syria and they send a volley of missiles into Israel. Game on and then a free for all when NK jumps in.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
South Korea subject but just showing how the "tit for tat" game is starting again.

Yonhap News Agencyþ@YonhapNews1h
(URGENT) S. Korea says N. Korean run of provocations 'deplorable' http://bit.ly/10N9Lzo


Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt


2013/05/19 14:08 KST

(URGENT) S. Korea says N. Korean run of provocations 'deplorable'



----------------------------------------------

NK hasn't reacted to SK setting up all the missiles yet, this is just SK verbal response to NK's test fire of three missiles, which was a tit-for-tat for US testing some stuff.

full article on subject
posted for fair use


2013/05/19 14:39 KST


S. Korea condemns N. Korean run of provocations, urges dialogue

SEOUL, May 19 (Yonhap) -- South Korea on Sunday condemned North Korea's recent series of provocations and urged the communist state to engage in dialogue to resolve a standoff over an inter-Korean industrial zone.

In a statement, Kim Hyung-suk, spokesman for the unification ministry, defined Pyongyang's provocative actions as "deplorable" and called on the North to "act responsibly" in the international community.

The ministry's statement came one day after the North fired three short-range missiles into the sea off its east coast.


Kim also held North Korea responsible for the suspension of operations at Kaesong industrial complex and for the lack of subsequent inter-Korean talks to resolve the issue.

Operations at the factory park in the North Korean border town screeched to a halt in early April, as North Korea withdrew all of its 53,000 workers and barred South Korean employees, parts and supplies from entering the area. The North shut down the complex in protest of South Korea-U.S. military exercises and fresh international sanctions imposed on Pyongyang following its nuclear test in February.

South Korea has made proposals for talks over Kaesong, the latest of which was rejected last week. North Korea said Seoul's proposal for talks on recovering raw materials and finished goods from Kaesong was a "crafty ploy" and demanded the South stop making provocative remarks against the North.

Kim on Sunday accused the North of passing the buck to Seoul.

"It's quite regrettable that North Korea has denigrated our dialogue proposals and distorted facts while shifting the blame for the halted operations to us," the spokesman said. "If North Korea is serious about discussions over raw materials, it must respond to our offer for talks."

The industrial zone, which has combined cheap North Korean labor with the South's technology and capital, opened after the inaugural summit between late South Korean President Kim Dae-jung and his counterpart Kim Jong-il in June 2000. It is viewed as one of the last symbols of inter-Korean rapprochement.

jeeho@yna.co.kr
(END)

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2013/05/19/34/0401000000AEN20130519001800315F.HTML
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Did you see what I posted on the WOW thread last night about Syria setting up missiles to strike Israel if Syria is attacked? http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/show...*WINDS****of****WAR****&p=4841011#post4841011

I see that ST posted a thread about it on main just a bit ago too.

Dear Leader might join in, but I believe WWIII will have started just before that, as in as soon as we (or someone) attacks Syria and they send a volley of missiles into Israel. Game on and then a free for all when NK jumps in.

The thing is, if the IDF's standing orders are anywhere near the speculated "Samson Option", a lot of places outside of Syria and Iran may well end up with "special deliveries" as payback for assisting in creating the current situation. Take the estimations out of that recent report on casualties in an Iranian/Israeli exchange and extrapolate it to include other Iranian allies and you'll see what I mean.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Steve Herman‏@W7VOA33m
This follows firing of several similar missiles in same waters yesterday.

Steve Herman‏@W7VOA34m
Yonhap quotes #ROK MND source saying #DPRK launched one short-range guided missile in the East Sea [Sea of Japan] Sunday afternoon.


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA36m
Yonhap: #DPRK has fired another short-range missile.




2013/05/19 17:29 KST
(URGENT) N. Korea fires short-range missile into East Sea: official




2013/05/19 17:59 KST


(LEAD) N. Korea fires short-range missile into sea for 2nd day: official

(ATTN: UPDATES with quotes, details; AMENDS headline)
SEOUL, May 19 (Yonhap) -- North Korea on Sunday fired a short-range missile into the East Sea, a Seoul military official said, a day after firing three short-range guided missiles off the Korean Peninsula's east coast.

North Korea fired the missile Sunday afternoon, the official said on the condition of anonymity, adding that the missile was fired in a northeasterly direction, away from South Korea.
http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/19/0200000000AEN20130519003800315.HTML
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Tick, tick, tick....

For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-south-korea-nuclear-20130519,0,6325988.story

More South Koreans support developing nuclear weapons
Growing concern about North Korea's nuclear program has led many in South Korea to favor the idea of building atomic weapons. Japan too is discussing such a move.

By Barbara Demick, Los Angeles Times

May 18, 2013, 6:40 p.m.

SEOUL — Perhaps it is merely basic human desire to keep up with the neighbors, but an increasing number of South Koreans are saying that they want nuclear weapons too.

Even in Japan, a country still traumatized by the legacy of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there is a debate about the once-taboo topic of nuclear weapons.

The mere fact that the bomb is being discussed as a policy option shows how North Korea's nuclear program could trigger a new arms race in East Asia, unraveling decades of nonproliferation efforts. The government in Pyongyang conducted its third nuclear test in February and is believed to be preparing a fourth.

In South Korea, the pro-nuclear faction is becoming surprisingly mainstream. Its most prominent champion is Chung Mong-joon, a ruling party legislator and a scion of the Hyundai business dynasty.

"Suppose you have a dangerous neighbor with a gun," Chung said in a recent interview. "You have to take measures to protect yourself. And being a gun control advocate isn't going to help you."

Chung shocked attendees at the Carnegie International Nuclear Policy Conference last month in Washington by calling for South Korea to build its own bomb. He argues that it is time to try something new after two decades of failed diplomacy and engagement with North Korea.

"We have to admit that everything we've tried has failed," Chung said.

To some extent, it is a matter of national pride with a touch of machismo. South Korea's economy is 20 times the size of the North's, but the North has gate-crashed the elite club of nuclear-weapon states.

Separate opinion polls taken this year by the Asan Institute for Policy Studies and Gallup Korea showed nearly two-thirds of South Koreans in support of nuclear weapons, preferably under their own control.

"It is mostly an emotional, knee-jerk response to the frustration of the North Korean nuclear threat," said Daniel Pinkston, a Seoul-based analyst for the International Crisis Group. "People tend to say, yes, they want nuclear weapons, but not if they think through the costs and consequences."

Under the international Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that went into force in 1970, only the United States, China, Russia, Britain and France are recognized as nuclear weapons states, with the understanding that they will share the peaceful benefits of nuclear energy.

If South Korea were to build its own nuclear weapons, it would have to withdraw from the treaty, as did North Korea.

Another increasingly popular view holds that the United States should reposition tactical nuclear weapons in South Korea that were withdrawn in 1991. The withdrawal was a key demand of the pro-democracy camp that dislodged South Korea's military dictatorship.

"It would provide a trump card that would enable a breakthrough in the North Korean nuclear problem. Most of all, it would become a game-changer in the geopolitical and strategic dynamics surrounding the nuclear crisis," says a much-discussed essay written last year by Cheon Seong-whun of the Korea Institute for National Unification, one of South Korea's most respected nuclear analysts.

South Korea had a secret nuclear weapons development program in the 1970s under Park Chung-hee, the late military dictator whose daughter, Park Geun-hye, is the current president. It was abandoned under pressure from the United States.

President Park, who took office in February, hasn't picked up the call to develop nuclear weapons. But the current administration is bristling at the limitations that result from the nonproliferation pact. Its civilian nuclear reactors use fuel purchased from the United States under a 1974 nuclear cooperation.

South Koreans want to renegotiate that agreement, which expires next year, to lift a ban on reprocessing the spent nuclear rods, putting them in a better position to eventually develop their own nuclear weapons.

Japan and South Korea are in a similar position in that they are both heavily dependent on civilian nuclear technology that could eventually be spun off for military use.

Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party has pushed to keep nuclear reactors open — despite the antinuclear sentiments that followed the 2011 post-tsunami disaster at Fukushima — by arguing that their reactors are in themselves a nuclear deterrent.

"What they are saying in a tacit manner is that 98% of our program is peaceful, but we have the potential for something else," said Narushige Michishita, a professor at the Tokyo-based National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies.

Outspoken hawks such as Shintaro Ishihara, former governor of Tokyo and a leader of the Japan Restoration Party, openly call for the development of nuclear weapons.

"Your words lack clout unless you own nuclear weapons," Ishihara provocatively told reporters at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan in November. "Russia took our land, and it has nuclear weapons. China also has nuclear arms, and it is trying to grab Japan's land."

Peter Hayes, a leading nonproliferation advocate and director of the Berkeley-based Nautilus Institute, says Japan could probably develop a nuclear weapon in five to 10 years if it chose, but will more likely conclude that it is safer under the U.S. nuclear umbrella.

"This is mostly chest-thumping and an attempt to put pressure on China and the U.S. to do something about North Korea," Hayes said. As for South Korea's nuclear ambitions, he says, "This is a dumb, stupid idea, but it makes good press."

barbara.demick@latimes.com

Copyright © 2013, Los Angeles Times
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
see post 13 above, now they both have missiles in area...

posted for fair use


N. Korea Deployed Multiple Rocket Launchers in Islets Near Front Line
[2013-05-20, 11:26:08]

North Korea is said to have recently deployed multiple rocket launchers to islets near their front line in the Yellow Sea.

The number of launchers deployed to regions near the southernmost Mu islet has not yet been confirmed.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited the Mu and Jangjae islets last August and March of this year to direct shooting drills.

The last time the North deployed multiple rocket launchers in the regions near Mu islet was in 2010 when the North used 122 millimeter launchers to shell South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island.

Mu islet is located about ten kilometers from Yeonpyeong Island.

A South Korean military official said the South’s recent deployment of Israeli-made Spike missiles on Yeonpyeong and Baengnyeong islands in the Yellow Sea is not related to the North’s latest deployment.

The official said the South has been reinforcing military power in the region based on various scenarios, adding that the South is closely watching developments on the North’s deployment of multiple rocket launchers.

On what North Korea fired toward the East Sea on Saturday and Sunday, Defense Ministry Spokesman Kim Min-seok told reporters on Monday that they are likely to be short-range missiles or rockets of great caliber.

Kim said given that rockets of great caliber are still being developed in China and Russia, North Korea is unlikely to have deployed them and likely to be developing them instead.

However, he added that any weapon system with expanded range and caliber is a bigger threat to South Korea.

http://english.kbs.co.kr/news/news_view.html?id=IK&No=96030
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
I wonder why July? Is that when the current US joint mil exercises in area finish? Nope, I looked, the Nimitz thing was only for two days.


Stella Kimþ@stella2songhee1h
#DPRK likely 2 continue firing missiles or artillery up 2 July acc 2 experts
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use


2013/05/20 15:26 KST


N. Korea yet to develop large-caliber rocket launchers: Seoul

SEOUL, May 20 (Yonhap) -- North Korea has yet to finish developing 300-millimeter-caliber multiple rocket launchers, South Korea's defense ministry said Monday, following the North's provocative launches of missiles and artillery shells over the weekend.

North Korea fired a short-range projectile into the East Sea on Sunday, a day after shooting three other similar projectiles, presumed by Seoul to be missiles or rockets, off the Korean Peninsula's east coast in defiance of the international community's warnings against hostile actions.

The ministry presumed the projectiles to be modified KN-02 guided missiles or rockets fired from 300 mm-caliber multiple rocket launchers, given that they have a range of about 120 kilometers, long enough to reach regions far below the capital city of Seoul in the South.

The North, however, may not have the large-caliber rocket artillery system ready for a real combat situation yet, ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said in a briefing.

"It is likely that they are in the stage of developing it," Kim said.

China and Russia have completely or partly developed the large-caliber rocket artillery system, but the North seems to have yet to finish the development, being conducted on technology possibly borrowed from the two countries, Kim said.

Following Saturday's launchings, the ministry first said the North fired three short-range guided missiles but renamed them as projectiles on Sunday on the assumption that the four, including the one fired on Sunday, may include missiles and rockets.

"Whether they are missiles or rockets, a sharp increase in the target range allows the North to aim at more objects and targets," Kim said. "An increase in the size of caliber means larger explosiveness and increased threats."

The unexpected launches by the North came amid nagging inter-Korean tensions, triggered after the North's long-range rocket launch in December and its third nuclear test on Feb. 12.

The Unification Ministry, which is in charge of dealing with North Korean affairs, called the North's weekend launches "deplorable," demanding that the North "act responsibly."

pbr@yna.co.kr
(END)


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2013/05/20/84/0401000000AEN20130520006800315F.HTML
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use


2013/05/20 15:38 KST


(LEAD) FM calls N. Korea's nuclear threats, provocations 'grave'

SEOUL, May 20 (Yonhap) -- The security situation on the Korean Peninsula remains "grave" following North Korea's recent launching of short-range projectiles and its defiant pursuit of nuclear weapons, South Korea's top diplomat said Monday.

Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se made the remarks at an annual conference of heads of overseas diplomatic missions in Seoul, after the North test-fired four short-range projectiles into the East Sea over the weekend.

Tests of short-range missiles or projectiles by North Korea are not uncommon, but the North's latest tests dashed hopes of easing months of high tensions, triggered by Pyongyang's nuclear test in February.

"We continue to face a grave situation due to a series of provocations and nuclear threats by North Korea," Yun told the conference, without elaborating further.

Yun also called for senior diplomats to remain vigilant against a recent series of controversial remarks and behaviors by Japanese leaders.

"Retrogressive remarks and acts by some Northeast Asian leaders keep us on alert," Yun said in a thinly veiled swipe at Japanese leaders.


http://img.yonhapnews.co.kr/etc/inner/EN/2013/05/20/AEN20130520007500315_01_i.jpg

Japanese leaders have drawn strong criticism from the international community by attempting to excuse the country's wartime atrocities before and during World War II.

In the latest case, Osaka Mayor Toru Hashimoto has been under fire for making remarks last week that the Japanese military's sexual enslavement of Asian women during World War II was "necessary."

Yun's ministry condemned Hashimoto's remarks as "preposterous ones that insult the dignity of women, distort history and defend crimes against humanity."

Historians say that tens of thousands of Asian women, mostly Koreans, were forced to work in front-line brothels for Japanese soldiers during the war when the Korean Peninsula was a colony of Japan.

Japan has acknowledged that its wartime military used sex slaves, but it refuses to issue an apology or compensate the victims individually, arguing that the issue was settled by a 1965 treaty that normalized relations between the two countries.

Also on Monday, foreign ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young reiterated that Japanese leaders must have a correct view of history to mend ties with South Korea.

"A wrongdoer must know what he has done wrong. It is important to make a firm resolution not to repeat wrongdoing and behave accordingly," Cho replied, when asked about a series of nationalistic remarks and behaviors by Japanese leaders that appear to revisit their wartime atrocities.

"Japanese leaders should pay careful attention to why this issue keeps coming up and why such questions continue to be asked endlessly," Cho said.

"They should acknowledge their wrongdoing, reflect upon themselves and act accordingly," Cho said.

kdh@yna.co.kr
(END)

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/northkorea/2013/05/20/75/0401000000AEN20130520007500315F.HTML
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
2013/05/20 16:11 KST


(URGENT) N. Korea launches short-range missile into East Sea for third day


http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/20/0200000000AEN20130520007700315.HTML




updated

2013/05/20 16:28 KST


N. Korea fires short-range missile for third day

SEOUL, May 20 (Yonhap) -- North Korea fired another short-range missile into the East Sea on Monday, marking the third straight day of launches, South Korea's defense ministry said.

"North Korea again launched what appears to be a KN-02 short-range missile," said a ministry official. "We are closely watching the movements of the North's military in case of further launches."

Monday's launch occurred between 11 a.m. and noon.

North Korea has launched a total of five short-range missiles in the past three days, including three on Saturday and one on Sunday.

(END)

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/20/40/0200000000AEN20130520008000315F.HTML
 
Last edited:

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Steve Hermanþ@W7VOA4m
#ROK MND earlier speculated Sat/Sun #DPRK firings could have been test of new artillery, not necessarily older short-range missiles.


Steve Hermanþ@W7VOA7m
Reports of another short range missile launch into eastern waters off #DPRK.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Yonhap News Agency‏@YonhapNews1m
Cheong Wa Dae urges N. Korea to stop aggravating tensions with missile launches http://bit.ly/19TC03I


posted for fair use


2013/05/20 16:32 KST


Cheong Wa Dae urges N. Korea to stop aggravating tensions with missile launches

SEOUL, May 20 (Yonhap) -- South Korea's presidential office Cheong Wa Dae urged North Korea Monday to stop aggravating tensions on the Korean Peninsula after the communist nation fired what appears to be a short-range missile off its east coast for a third straight day.

"Whether it's a test-firing or armed demonstration, North Korea should not engage in tension-creating acts," Kim Jang-soo, head of the national security office, was quoted as saying by presidential spokeswoman Kim Haing.

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/20/0200000000AEN20130520008100315.HTML
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
posted for fair use


SKorea analyzing NKorea's 4 projectile launches





By HYUNG-JIN KIM
— May. 19 11:17 PM EDT
You are here

Home » South Korea » SKorea analyzing NKorea's 4 projectile launches


http://binaryapi.ap.org/91249a000115415d90075aa6615414b3/460x.jpg

A South Korean army soldier passes by a barbed-wire fence in Paju, South Korea, near the border village of Panmunjom, Sunday, May 19, 2013. The South Korean military on Sunday have beefed up monitoring on North Korea and are maintaining a high-level of readiness to deal with any risky developments to guard against possibilities of additional missile launches and other types of provocations. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

South Korean army soldiers look through telescopes at a military check point in Paju, South Korea, near the border village of Panmunjom, Sunday, May 19, 2013. The South Korean military on Sunday have beefed up monitoring on North Korea and are maintaining a high-level of readiness to deal with any risky developments to guard against possibilities of additional missile launches and other types of provocations. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)



South Korean students riding bicycles pass by army soldiers on Unification Bridge in Paju, South Korea, near the border village of Panmunjom, Sunday, May 19, 2013. The South Korean military on Sunday have beefed up monitoring on North Korea and are maintaining a high-level of readiness to deal with any risky developments to guard against possibilities of additional missile launches and other types of provocations. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

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SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea is analyzing whether projectiles North Korea fired into its eastern waters over the weekend are short-range missiles or a new type of artillery the country may be developing, officials said Monday.

North Korea fired what Seoul officials called a short-range projectile Sunday, a day after conducting three similar launches. South Korean officials earlier said the weapons fired on Saturday were guided missiles but later clarified that they may not be missiles, referring to the objects as "projectiles."

"There is a possibility that they are short-range missiles or large-caliber rockets with a similar ballistic trajectory," Defense Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok told reporters.

Kim said North Korea may be developing such a large-caliber gun and South Korea is taking seriously whatever weapons the country develops because it could attack the South. He said an artillery gun with a bigger caliber will likely have more destructive power.


Officials were trying to find out what exactly the North fired Saturday and Sunday, a ministry official said on condition of anonymity citing department rules.

North Korea routinely test-launches short-range missiles. But the latest launches came amid some tentative signs of easing tension on the Korean Peninsula. Earlier this year, North Korea issued near-daily threats to attack South Korea and the U.S. to protest their annual joint military drills and U.N. sanctions imposed over its February nuclear test.

South Korea called the latest launches a provocation and urged the North to take responsible actions while the U.S. said threats or provocations would only further deepen North Korea's international isolation, while

The North has a variety of missiles but Seoul and Washington don't believe the country has mastered the technology needed to manufacture nuclear warheads that are small and light enough to be placed on a missile capable of reaching the U.S.

The Korean Peninsula officially remains in a state of war because the 1950-53 Korean War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/north-korea-fires-projectile-eastern-waters
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Steve Herman‏@W7VOA2m
No indicaton that any of the five projectiles fired by #DPRK in past 3 days were targeted in direction of #ROK.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
This is the 6th in 3 days
--------------------------------------------------

Yonhap News Agency‏@YonhapNews2m
(3rd LD) N. Korea fires projectiles into sea for third day http://bit.ly/Z7fa9c


Yonhap News Agency‏@YonhapNews18m
(URGENT) N. Korea fires second projectile on Monday: Seoul http://bit.ly/Z7dtJ9


2013/05/20 18:26 KST


(3rd LD) N. Korea fires projectiles into sea for third day

(ATTN: UPDATES with firing of second projectile in first 5 paras)


SEOUL, May 20 (Yonhap) -- North Korea fired two short-range projectiles into the East Sea on Monday, marking the third straight day of launches, South Korea's defense ministry said.

The first launch occurred between 11 a.m. and noon, while the second took place between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m., the ministry said.

"It appears that North Korea's short-range projectile launches have not yet come to a complete end," a ministry official said.

Both projectiles were reportedly thought to be KN-02 surface-to-surface missiles.

North Korea has launched a total of six short-range projectiles in the past three days, including three on Saturday and one on Sunday.

"We are currently trying to determine what the projectile was and the North's intentions (behind the launch)," said a military official. "It appears that the North is trying to renew military tensions on the Korean Peninsula."

The projectile, which was fired from a mobile launcher off North Korea's east coast, flew about 120 kilometers in the northeasterly direction before falling into the sea, officials said.

The other four projectiles are also thought to have had a range of about 120 kilometers.

"Whether it's a test-firing or armed demonstration, North Korea should not engage in tension-creating acts," Kim Jang-soo, head of the national security office, was quoted as saying by presidential spokeswoman Kim Haing.

The launch was immediately reported to President Park Geun-hye. The national security office and the defense ministry are closely monitoring the situation, the spokeswoman said.

North Korea claimed the firing of projectiles is "a normal military exercise."

"Conducting military drills to build up a strong deterrence capability is a legitimate right of any sovereign country," said the Secretariat of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea, which is in charge of inter-Korean relations.

It added that South Korea and the United States were engaged in vicious anti-Pyongyang activities by making issue of the projectile launches.

The launches come after the North has toned down its saber-rattling in the past few weeks after South Korea and the United States concluded the annual Foal Eagle military drills on April 30.

yonngong@yna.co.kr
(END)

http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2013/05/20/65/0200000000AEN20130520010500315F.HTML
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Steve Hermanþ@W7VOA15m
MT @dpinkston: Still sorting out whether NK launched KN-02s or new 300mm artillery rockets under dev. Art. rockets would have 100km+ range.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.khaleejtimes.com/kt-arti...013/May/editorial_May43.xml&section=editorial

Defiance on the Peninsula

21 May 2013

Ban Ki-Moon seems to be on a fence-mending exercise in the Korean Peninsula. He has called upon the Stalinist state to refrain from further missile tests and opt for a dialogue with the stakeholders in the region.

In his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the UN secretary-general tried to prevail over Moscow to use its clout and good offices to persuade North Korean leader Kim Jong-un to return from the brink, and desist from plunging the entire Peninsula — and the world at large — in an another undesired war. But to what extent such soft diplomatic vibes can create ripples in Pyongyang’s politico-military establishment is not difficult to guess. Kim is unlikely to even heed to such calls, as his prime intention remains to attract international audience and compel the Western powers, especially the United States, to deal with it at par with its archrival across the line of Armistice.

The UN chief’s statement was too muted to make an impact, though. His utterances in capitals such as Seoul, Beijing, Moscow and Tokyo are of little relevance for North Korea. The same could have a robust impact if made in Pyongyang, and that too by exposing Kim to the international media. That is exactly what the young leadership in the communist state wants. North Korea, which fired a fifth short-range missile into the Sea of Japan on Monday — defying warnings from the world body and South Korea — after a flurry of similar tests over the weekend, is too berserk to be dealt with media supplications. It’s time for the UN and Washington to read between the lines and engage Kim in a manner that he expects from these avenues. There’s defiance is in the air and this could be easily deciphered in the statement of the North’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea. It said that ‘military training is the indisputable right of any sovereign nation’. In other words if something goes astray and leads to breakout of hostilities, Pyongyang would keep on portraying it part of nationalism — unmindful of deadly consequences for the region and the world.

What is mandatory is the fact that somehow North Korea has to be convinced to resume the stalled dialogue process. Russia, China and the United States can make a good collective beginning by brokering a dialogue and assuring it of a quid pro quo on the world stage.

Ban Ki-moon has to further push the envelope by choreographing a detailed peace roadmap for Pyongyang, and persuading Kim to do the needful. Ban, who comes from the same region and is well-versed with the intrigues that Pyongyang plays, has to exhibit extraordinary leadership to realise peace and reunification on the Peninsula.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.skynews.com.au/topstories/article.aspx?id=873725

N Korea fires six missiles in three days
Updated: 05:10, Tuesday May 21, 2013

North Korea has fired a sixth missile into the Sea of Japan on Monday despite a flurry of international protests.

The latest firing was confirmed by the South's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), who said it was unclear if the North was testing guided missiles or rockets from multiple launchers.

'North Korea launched two projectiles on Monday - one in the morning and the other in the afternoon,' a JCS spokesman told AFP.

Such drills are not unusual but they come as the Korean peninsula is only just emerging from a period of particularly elevated military tensions triggered by the North's nuclear test in February.

In a statement on Monday, Pyongyang angrily rejected criticism that the missile exercises were a deliberate attempt to kick off a fresh cycle of tensions.

'Military training ... is the indisputable right of any sovereign nation,' the North's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said.

'Viciously taking issue with our military's rocket firing training ... is an unacceptable challenge and a wanton provocation,' it said.

North Korea fired three short-range guided missiles off its east coast on Saturday and another on Sunday.

South Korea had labelled the weekend tests 'deplorable', while UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged Pyongyang to exercise restraint.

'It is time for them to resume dialogue and lower the tensions,' Ban said in Moscow on Sunday.

North Korea argues that the real provocation is coming from South Korea and the United States, which have carried out a series of small and large-scale joint military drills in recent months.

The joint exercises have included the use of nuclear-capable B2 stealth bombers and, most recently, the participation of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Nimitz.

On Monday South Korea's President Park Geun-Hye's top security adviser, Kim Jang-Soo, again urged Pyongyang to desist from any more drills.

'Whether it's just a test or a show of force, the North should not get involved in actions that create tension,' Kim said.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324787004578494670451961576.html


CHINA NEWS
May 20, 2013, 7:31 a.m. ET

China Urges North Korea to Free Fishermen

Article
Comments (1)

more in China »

By BRIAN SPEGELE And JOSH CHIN

BEIJING—China's government responded cautiously on Monday to concern over the safety of Chinese fishermen seized along with their vessel by North Koreans this month, in the latest test of ties between the traditional allies.

Details of the incident remain sketchy. The owner of the boat, Yu Xuejun, said the fishermen were captured on May 6 while operating in Chinese territorial waters off China's northeast coast. Mr. Yu, in an interview, said Chinese authorities didn't respond to his request for help for more than week after he reported the incident to border and maritime police.

The case only gained attention over the weekend after Mr. Yu published details of the incident on a popular social-networking site.

It isn't clear who exactly in North Korea is holding the fishermen. Mr. Yu said the captors had demanded ransom of 600,000 yuan ($97,700) be paid by Monday evening. In a series of posts since Saturday to his account on Tencent Holding Ltd.'s Weibo microblogging service, Mr. Yu pressed Chinese authorities to better protect Chinese fishermen.

"We just hope the country is able to protect our rights and interests, and lessen the instances of Chinese boats being detained by North Korea in China's territorial waters," Mr. Yu wrote.

Impoverished North Korea is widely accused of engaging in a range of illicit activities to raise hard cash, including drug smuggling, currency counterfeiting and arms trafficking.

At a daily press briefing on Monday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said China is in close communication with Pyongyang, without offering details.

China "has called on North Korea to handle this matter in a speedy fashion and make all efforts to guarantee the legal rights of Chinese fishermen as well as their property and personal safety," Mr. Hong said. A man who answered the phone at North Korea's embassy in Beijing declined to comment.

In May 2012, 29 people on three ships were detained by North Koreans, who demanded 300,000 yuan for each of the boat's release. It also wasn't clear in those cases who was responsible for the seizures.

The boats were eventually released nearly two weeks after they were captured. It isn't clear whether China's government agreed to pay ransom. Those cases received wide coverage in China's media and sparked online criticism of what many viewed as a tepid response from the Chinese government.

In a reflection of growing public frustration inside China with the country's problematic ally, Chinese social media users reacted angrily to news of the seizure.

"Fatty Kim the Third eats Chinese grain, uses Chinese tools and now comes over to detain Chinese people," wrote one user of Sina Corp.'s popular Weibo microblogging service, using a nickname for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that has grown common on the Chinese Internet.

Internet users also directed their fury at Beijing for appearing reluctant to respond to the detention of the fishing crew, with some suggesting the seizures might be part of a conspiracy to funnel money to Pyongyang.

Some of the sharpest comments came from retired general Luo Yuan, a hard-line nationalist who was once a staunch defender of North Korea. "Today I saw reports saying the Chinese embassy in North Korea has confirmed this really happened—it made me furious!" he wrote.

"North Korea has gone too far. Just because you're poor, that doesn't mean you can cross borders and detain people for ransom. The North Korean side must, in accordance with the Chinese government's request, immediately release the boat and guarantee the lives, property, safety and legal rights of its crew. Otherwise, evil acts will be repaid!"

The latest incident comes as tensions remain high on the Korean peninsula. North Korea has launched six missiles over the last three days, including two short-range missiles from its eastern coast into the sea on Monday, according to South Korea's defense ministry. Mr. Hong, China's foreign ministry spokesman, reiterated China's long-standing calls for tensions to be solved through negotiations.

It remained unclear Monday night whether Beijing had made any progress in negotiating the release of the boat or its crew.
—William Kazer and Kersten Zhang contributed to this article.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Blogs of War‏@BlogsofWar17m
RT @ap: BREAKING: North Korea says that a "special envoy" for leader Kim Jong Un has left for China

Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt



ETA: I'm going to post some intersting tweet convos that might give the "special envoy" a different importance, or a hint of something in the air/works
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source....
Posted for fair use....
http://thediplomat.com/flashpoints-blog/2013/05/22/kim-jong-un-is-no-master-strategist/

Kim Jong-Un Is No Master Strategist
By Zachary Keck
May 22, 2013

Despite their reputation for irrationality, North Korean leaders have always been masterful strategists.

The country’s founding leader and eternal president, Kim Il-Sung, masterfully exploited the Sino-Soviet split throughout the Cold War to extract aid from both without having to offer much in return. When the foundation of that strategy collapsed with the end of the Cold War, Kim Jong-Il turned to stoking China and America’s deep-seated fears of instability and nuclear weapons proliferation respectively, as well as South Korea’s longing for reunification, to continue receiving the aid that North Korea’s economy had become dependent on.

Indeed, for a state in as precarious of a situation as North Korea finds itself in, having a prudent grand strategy becomes something of a necessity. And yet it seems increasingly apparent that Kim Jong-Un lacks the skills as a strategist that his grandfather and father relied on to sustain the regime.

It’s too early to make a definitive judgment on whether North Korea has a game plan for ending the current crisis on terms favorable to itself. Time and again the country has shown itself quite capable at guiding seemingly random events towards a desired endgame. That being said, although the belligerent rhetoric succeeded in getting the world’s attention, it never resulted in any kind of tangible benefit for the North.

In fact, given the intense diplomacy that has continued to take place between South Korea, the U.S., China, and, to some extent, Japan, North Korea appears to have only succeeded in further uniting its adversaries and allies against it, while also losing some of its best sources of hard currencies by closing the Kaesong complex and coming under Chinese sanctions. Even Russia has largely remained on the same page as the other parties of the six-party talks as evident by its desire to hold a summit with South Korea on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in St. Petersburg in September.

North Korea’s actions from the past week appear to be desperate attempts to salvage some gains from the crisis. This was clearly the aim of inviting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to send an envoy to Pyongyang to discuss the issue of North Korea’s past abductions of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s. Once again, Pyongyang is falling back on its long-time successful tactic of exploiting slight differences in its adversaries’ priorities.

Beyond that, however, North Korea’s actions appear to be doomed to fail. One example of this was its launching of six short range missiles over the weekend. Coming on the heels of its increasingly belligerent threats and actions this spring, these missile tests failed to elicit much in the way of a reaction from any of the parties involved. The South Korean government, for instance, calmly told the public to simply expect more tests.

It’s possible these tests are only the beginning of a new campaign of provocations. Then again, they may very well not be. South Korea is simply unwilling to tolerate the kind of provocations that it did in 2010 without launching a devastating response in return. This point was made unambiguous by President Park Geun-Hye and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the height of the latest crisis. North Korean leaders quite possibly understand that attitudes on the other side of the Demilitarized Zone have changed and have tailored their actions accordingly. In doing so, they lack the option of taking actions that might break the status-quo North Korea currently faces.

China is unlikely to be of much help to the North. Although Chinese leaders will not place the kind of economic pressure on Pyongyang that might force its hand, they are also increasingly uninterested in protecting the regime from facing retribution for its actions. Last month JoongAng Ilbo reported that China refused to send a high-level envoy to North Korea as Pyongyang requested, which seems plausible given that the request Beijing’s last envoy brought to North Korea — namely, don’t test a ballistic missile — was defied in less than two weeks.

North Korea’s seizure of a Chinese fishing boat was likely an attempt to force Beijing to deal with Kim Jong-Un. It could work as it has in the past. But North Korea today has to contend with a new variable it hasn’t had to in the past, Chinese social media. The fierce criticism of North Korea on China’s social media websites following the boat’s seizure is just as likely to force Beijing to take a hardline stance with North Korea, rather than a conciliatory one as Pyongyang likely hoped. Indeed, the added variable of Chinese public opinion could complicate Kim Jong-Un’s ability to coerce China into giving into his demands for years to come.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source...
Posted for fair use....
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20130521/DA6DKTR80.html

Owner: Chinese boat's captain beaten by NKoreans

May 21, 6:39 AM (ET)
By LOUISE WATT

BEIJING (AP) - Gunmen wearing North Korean military uniforms released a Chinese fishing boat Tuesday after holding its crew for two weeks, beating up the captain and stealing the vessel's fuel, the boat's owner said. He added that the hijackers did not get the 600,000 yuan ($100,000) ransom they had demanded.

The seizure May 5 in what boat owner Yu Xuejun said were Chinese waters was the latest irritant in relations between North Korea and a Chinese government increasingly frustrated with its neighboring ally over tests of its nuclear and rocket technologies in defiance of U.N. bans. One of China's North Korea watchers said rogue border guards were probably responsible, rather than the Pyongyang government itself.

Yu said in an interview that the men were allowed to move around the boat while they were held captive, but were locked in a room at night. He said the captain suffered an arm injury when he was beaten, but he has since recovered, and that no other crew member was harmed. They now planned to stay out at sea for another 10 days.

"The North Koreans only left the crew with one sack of rice and one sack of flour. But this shouldn't be a problem as there are a lot of boats in that region now, all from Dalian," he said, referring to the northeast China port where his boat is based. "With their help, the crews will do OK for the next 8 or 10 days."

Yu publicized the boat's capture over the weekend on the Twitter-like Tencent Weibo as a ransom deadline neared. China then publicly demanded that North Korea release the men, though Chinese officials have not said whether they believe the armed captors were operating on their own or under North Korean government authority.

No ransom was paid, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a news briefing Tuesday.

"We demand North Korea investigate this case fully and furnish China with details, and take measures to stop such cases repeating themselves," Hong said.

Yu also said he hadn't paid any ransom. "We were working in our country's waters - why should I pay them?" he said. He had earlier written online that he couldn't afford it.

He said the captors "looked like soldiers, and the captain said they had guns and used force to take over the boat."

Yu posted coordinates on his microblog indicating the seizure took place about 100 kilometers (60 miles) from the westernmost point of North Korea and about 190 kilometers (120 miles) from Dalian.

That area is outside both countries' territorial waters - defined as 12 nautical miles from their shores - but within their overlapping Exclusive Economic Zones, which give them rights to resources including fishing. Jurisdictions in overlapping zones are not always clear.

Yu said the North Koreans took about five tons of light diesel oil and six barrels of gasoline and food, but navigation and communication equipment that was initially taken was returned, Yu said.

Yu's pleas for help and his frets that his crew might be mistreated were forwarded thousands of times on the Internet, and a high-ranking Chinese military officer, Maj. Gen. Luo Yuan, wrote on Sina Weibo of his fury over the detention.

"North Korea has gone too far! Even if you are short of money, you can't grab people across the border and blackmail," wrote Luo, who has more than 300,000 followers.

A similar abduction a year ago of Chinese fishermen by armed North Koreans caused an uproar in China. After their release, those fishermen said they had been starved and beaten, and some had been stripped of everything but their underwear.

Hong, the Foreign Ministry spokesman, had declined to answer a question Monday about who exactly China believed was behind the boat seizure, but he made clear that Beijing was looking for the North Korean government to secure the release of the boat and crew.

An expert on North Korea at the Liaoning Academy of Social Sciences in northeast China said he doubted the North Korean government would have had any knowledge of the incident when it happened.

"This incident is purely about a lawless act by the North Korean border police to blackmail our fishermen," said Lu Chao, adding that such things frequently happen to Chinese fishermen working near border waters.

"Sometimes, if the amount they are asking for isn't too high, the boat owner would just pay it," he said. This time, it might be related to spring food shortages, "so they are asking for a huge ransom."

---

AP researcher Flora Ji contributed to this report.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Convo speculation on possible "changes" that may or may not have taken place.

I have said before, with the different stances changing and things happening, it's like more than one person calling the shots. Possibly as many as three at different times.


Easier to read and see the pics at the link (you don't need to have a twitter acct, I don't):
https://twitter.com/ISNJH

---------------------------------------
Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH7h
Here is another picture recently released of him with again hands behind back being held in an unusual pose. pic.twitter.com/yAm9pJM1ca

View photo Reply

Caio B. F. W. Abramo‏@caioabramo8h
@ISNJH So he's under arrest, paraded around by his uncle and aunt as just a face?
Expand


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@caioabramo I am leaning towards the fact that the military has reigned him and is now parading him around under tight guidance.


Caio B. F. W. Abramo‏@caioabramo8h
@ISNJH 'S what I meant. But can't the workers see the handcuffs? Or you think no cuffs, hands behind back "recommended" by the sec. detail?

Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@caioabramo unlikely they would cuff him in such a public place but likely just instruct keep hands behind back behave and smile 4 camera.


Caio B. F. W. Abramo‏@caioabramo8h
@ISNJH Makes sense, though this is still just circumstantial evidence...
Expand



Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@caioabramo agreed nothing conclusive but interesting in the fact going from a more fluid stance at events to now suddely ridged stance.
11:05 AM - 21 May 13 · Details



Caio B. F. W. Abramo‏@caioabramo8h
@ISNJH Can't reply in kind. I was going to propose the same, maybe be hiding something.
Expand



Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@caioabramo unlikely they would cuff him in such a public place but likely just instruct keep hands behind back behave and smile 4 camera.


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@caioabramo I am leaning towards the fact that the military has reigned him and is now parading him around under tight guidance.


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@jarrettwold there are only a few photo's of him with hands out front from the visit.


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@jarrettwold very strange for someone to be walking around a factory with ones hands constantly behind back out of sight..



Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH8h
@jarrettwold the photo's of him touring the beer factory released was again him with hands behind his back. with labcoat over his back.


Nathan J Hunt‏@ISNJH9h
also while in past in released photo's of KJU in background there was always a number of heavy security visible in background.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
Blogs of War‏@BlogsofWar17m
RT @ap: BREAKING: North Korea says that a "special envoy" for leader Kim Jong Un has left for China

Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt



ETA: I'm going to post some intersting tweet convos that might give the "special envoy" a different importance, or a hint of something in the air/works


more info on special envoy

Steve Herman‏@W7VOA39m
#DPRK media reporting top military official dispatched to China as special envoy of Kim Jong Un.
 

Lilbitsnana

On TB every waking moment
MRLs = multiple rocket launcher


Steve Herman‏@W7VOA28m
Chosun Ilbo: #ROK gov't has concluded 6 missiles #DPRK launched into sea between Sat. & Mon.were for test of new bigger MRL's.
Retweeted by Nathan J Hunt
 

bluetick

Inactive
The apparently recent photo from the twitter site in post 37 reminds me of one from the very long NK thread where KJU was again standing amid military types with his hands held by the guys on either side of him. KJU's face had a scared/grim look then too. Makes one wonder who is in charge...
 
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