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War lurks in the shadows on the Korean Peninsula

The file photo of a North Korean soldier standing guard in front of rocket launch installations (Photo by AFP)

North Korea has placed its frontline forces on alert for war with the South, in an apparent move to launch attacks should the latter ignore an ultimatum to end its propaganda campaign against Pyongyang.

The North’s official Korean Central News Agency said the country’s leader Kim Jong-un had ordered the frontline, combined units of the Korean People’s Army (KPA) to “enter a wartime state” from Friday 5:00 pm (0800 GMT).

The troops should be “fully battle-ready to launch surprise operations” while the entire frontline should be placed in a “semi-war state,” the agency quoted him as saying.

This screen grab, taken from North Korean TV and released by South Korea’s news agency Yonhap on August 21, 2015, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (L) during an emergency meeting of the Central Military Commission on August 20, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

 

Pyongyang has given Seoul until Saturday to call off a mudslinging campaign it recently re-launched against the North by broadcasting propaganda through loudspeakers over the border.

South Korea went back to the practice last week after an 11-year-long hiatus. Seoul made the decision after blaming Pyongyang for a landmine explosion that severely injured two South Korean soldiers who were patrolling the inter-Korean demilitarized zone. North Korea has denied the accusation that it had planted the mines.

Pyongyang has also reinstalled loudspeakers of its own along the border with the South.

An emergency meeting late Thursday of the North’s Central Military Commission (CMC) endorsed the ultimatum and ratified plans for “a retaliatory strike and counterattack on the whole length of the front.”

Brinkmanship at a time of volatility?

South Korea’s Defense Ministry has rejected the North’s ultimatum, with a spokesman insisting the country would “continue operating the loudspeakers.”

This photo shows South Korea’s President Park Geun-Hye (L) during a visit to the headquarters of Third Army in Yongin, south of Seoul, on August 21, 2015. Military tensions are particularly high on the divided Korean Peninsula. (Photo by AFP)

 

The South also placed its military on high alert, with Seoul’s Ministry of National Defense saying, “South Korea will strongly retaliate against any kind of North Korean attacks and the North will have to take all the responsibility for such... actions.”

In an exclusive interview with Press TV on Friday, political activist and radio host Don DeBar said that the potential for a war between the two Koreas “is going to hinge on how seriously North Korea… feels threatened by ‘the exercises,’” referring to the massive military drills that tens of thousands of Korean and American troops recently launched.

The drills simulate a full-scale invasion by North Korea. Pyongyang has denounced the joint drill as provocative.

The escalation of tensions between the two sides was also marked by a rare exchange of fire on Thursday between the two Koreas. According to reports, the exchange of fire was triggered by North Korea, which fired several shells in the general direction of one of the South’s border propaganda units.

The two Koreas remain technically at war after the 1950-53 Korean War ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.


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