The Province

Threat from North Korea goes beyond nuclear

Country’s stockpile of convention­al weapons alone has potential to devastate the South, analysts warn

- Anna Fifield

TOKYO — If the United States were to strike North Korea, Kim Jong Un’s regime would retaliate by unleashing its convention­al weaponry lined up on the demilitari­zed zone that has separated the two Koreas for about seven decades.

And that convention­al weaponry is reliable, unlike North Korea’s missiles, and could cause major devastatio­n in South Korea, which is a staunch ally of the United States.

“This becomes a very limiting factor for the U.S.,” said Carl Baker, a retired Air Force officer with extensive experience in South Korea.

As tensions between North Korea and the outside world have risen over the past month, there has been increasing talk about the United States using military force either to pre-empt a North Korean provocatio­n or to respond to one.

That talk continues even after it emerged that the Navy had not sent an aircraft carrier strike group to the Korean Peninsula region, as officials, including U.S. President Donald Trump, had implied.

U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham said last week that he supported striking North Korea to stop it from developing the capability to reach the United States with a missile — even if that came at a huge cost for the region.

“It would be terrible, but the war would be over (in South Korea), it wouldn’t be here,” Graham said in an interview with NBC.

Although most of the recent focus has been on North Korea’s ambition to be able to strike the continenta­l United States with a missile, the people of South Korea have been living under the constant threat of a convention­al North Korean attack for decades.

North Korea has “a tremendous amount of artillery” right opposite Seoul, said Joseph S. Bermudez Jr., a senior imagery analyst at 38 North, a website focused on North Korea.

The Second Corps of the Korean People’s Army stationed at Kaesong on the northern side of the DMZ has about 500 artillery pieces, Bermudez said. And this is just one army corps; similar corps are on either side of it.

All the artillery pieces in the Second Corps can reach the northern outskirts of Seoul, just 30 miles from the DMZ, but the largest projectile­s could fly to the south of the capital. About 25 million people — or half of the South Korean population — live in the greater Seoul metropolit­an area.

“It’s the tyranny of proximity,” said David Maxwell, who served in South Korea during his 30 years in the Army and now teaches at Georgetown University. “It’s like the distance between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. Imagine a million man army just outside the Beltway with artillery they could use to terrorize Washington.”

About half of North Korea’s artillery pieces are multiple rocket launchers, including 18 to 36 of the huge 300 mm launchers that Pyongyang has bragged about. State media last year published photos of the system during a test firing that Kim attended.

The 300 mm guns could probably fire eight rounds every 15 minutes, Bermudez said, and have a range of about 44 miles.

“This could do a lot of damage,” he said. “If they hit a highrise building with a couple of rounds of artillery, people get into their cars, causing huge traffic jams, so North Korea could target highways and bridges in cascades.”

If North Korea were to start unleashing its artillery on the South, it would be able to fire about 4,000 rounds an hour, Roger Cavazos of the Nautilus Institute estimated in a 2012 study. There would be 2,811 fatalities in the initial volley and 64,000 people could be killed that first day, the majority of them in first three hours, he wrote.

 ??  ?? Soldiers march in military parade in Pyongyang, North Korea. The South has been living under the constant threat of a convention­al North Korean attack for decades. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Soldiers march in military parade in Pyongyang, North Korea. The South has been living under the constant threat of a convention­al North Korean attack for decades. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES

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