N.Korea Rattles Sabres; US, South Plan War Games

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North Korea (news - web sites) said Monday it would win any nuclear war with the United States as the crisis over the communist state's suspected drive to manufacture atomic weapons entered the fifth month. South Korea (news - web sites) weighed in with some rhetoric of its own. President Kim Dae-jung (news - web sites) said North Korea should "not even dream of having nuclear weapons," calling it a dangerous development that could trigger an arms race.

"If North Korea gets nuclear weapons, the stance of Japan and our country toward nukes would change," he said in a speech.

And the United States and South Korea detailed plans for war games on the tense peninsula in March and April -- a time when Washington could be at war in Iraq.

North Korean state media returned to saber-rattling after a weekend of reinforcing cult worship of reclusive leader Kim Jong-il. It was Kim's 61st birthday Sunday.

"Victory in a nuclear conflict will be ours and the red flag of army-first politics will flutter ever more vigorously," state radio said, reported by South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

"Our victory is certain and the future ever more radiant," it said, touting the dominance of the army in the world's most heavily militarized society.

The comments came as the United States, which keeps 37,000 troops in South Korea under a 50-year-old alliance, said annual bilateral military exercises will be held in the South in March and April.

The U.S. Forces Korea said the allies had informed the North about the war games.

The North's million-strong Korean People's Army is the world's fifth-largest and military spending accounts for as much as a quarter of the economically struggling country's gross domestic product. The North's population is 22.5 million people.

WARNINGS DAILY FARE

War warnings and claims the United States is poised to attack North Korea have been almost daily fare in Pyongyang's official media since the nuclear crisis flared up last year.

South Koreans have lived within range of forward-deployed North Korean artillery for years and have largely played down recent threats.

President Kim said he believed Washington was committed to a peaceful solution.

"I think that the United States will not take military action against North Korea. I see no possibility of that," Kim said in a speech at a luncheon. His comments were reported by the presidential office

But the prolonged nuclear impasse has raised concerns about the South's economy as Kim prepares to hand power to President-elect Roh Moo-hyun on February 25. South Korea's central bank said Monday the South could miss its 2003 growth target if the crises over Iraq and North Korea dragged on.

"We will maintain a low interest rate policy...as our economy may fail to meet expectations if the uncertainty over war in Iraq and North Korea's suspected nuclear programs is prolonged," it said in a statement to parliament.

The standoff over North Korea's suspected nuclear program has been simmering since mid-October, when Washington said Pyongyang had admitted to pursuing a program to enrich uranium in violation of major international treaty commitments.

Since then, North Korea has expelled U.N. nuclear inspectors and withdrawn from the treaty that aims to curb the global spread of nuclear weapons and said it was ready to restart a mothballed reactor capable of producing plutonium for bombs.

Pyongyang has insisted that it only intends to produce electricity for its decrepit economy and that the nuclear row is a bilateral dispute with Washington that can only be resolved through two-way talks leading to a non-aggression treaty.

But a vote on February 12 by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the U.N. nuclear watchdog, referring the nuclear issue to the Security Council, was seen as a rebuff to North Korea's insistence on a bilateral solution.

The Security Council has the power to impose economic sanctions -- a step North Korea has said would amount to a declaration of war.

But the IAEA says its members had no plan to push for sanctions now. North Korea's allies Russia and China and neighbors including South Korea are against sanctions.

The United States has said it has no intention of invading North Korea and is willing to talk to Pyongyang but not to negotiate any new nuclear deal. http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=578&u=/nm/20030217/ts_nm/korea_north_dc&printer=1
 
(Related)Burn with hatred' against U.S.

North Koreans urged by state press
on Kim's birthday

North Korea marked leader Kim Jong-Il's birthday yesterday by urging the military to be on alert and the people to "burn with hatred" against the United States.

The anti-U.S. diatribe in the state-run newspaper Rodong Sinmun appeared at the height of government-orchestrated celebrations for Kim's 61st birthday, which was hailed with festivals, speeches and calls for patriotism.

Kim's birthday is a national holiday in North Korea.

Rodong Sinmun said the U.S. was pushing its nuclear dispute with North Korea "to the brink of war." America and its allies are pressuring the North to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

"All servicemen of the Korea People's Army should always be on the alert," the newspaper's editorial said. "All party members and workers must burn with hatred and hostility in their hearts toward U.S. imperialists. When the decisive time comes, we must rise as one and should show in full the heroic might of the people."

This year's celebrations surrounding Kim's birthday coincide with a report by Japanese media that he is grooming his 21-year-old son, Kim Jong-Chul, as his successor. Little is known about Kim Jong-Chul, although a South Korean newspaper reported he had studied in France.

Kim Jong-Il took power in 1994 following the death of his father, Kim Il-Sung. Kim Jong-Il became "Great Leader" and formally succeeded his father as Communist Party secretary in 1998, but declined to assume the title of president. Instead he abolished the post, designating Kim Il-Sung "eternal president," and has since ruled as chairman of the National Defense Commission.

The North wants direct talks with the U.S., from whom it hopes to win a non-aggression pact.

Yesterday, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice reiterated that the U.S. government would not agree to bilateral talks.

"We cannot allow the North Koreans to step back into a bilateral discussion," she said. "We believe that the Asian balance of power could be affected by what's going on in the Korean peninsula." http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=31073
 
N Korea threatens truce breach

North Korea has threatened to pull out of the armistice agreement that ended the Korean War, accusing the United States of breaking the terms of the truce.The statement, carried by the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), accused the United States of breaking the truce by bolstering its forces in the region and mounting a naval blockade.

Earlier on Monday, the United States and South Korea announced they would stage joint military exercises in South Korea next month, in a move which was thought likely to heighten tensions with the North.

The two countries have been at loggerheads with each other over the last few months after it was revealed North Korea planned to revive its nuclear programme.

Although the armistice agreement ended the Korean War in 1953, the North and South have never signed a peace treaty.

"The agreement that was signed to provide a peaceful solution to the Korean issue has been systematically ditched by the US and used for the purpose of its hostile policy towards the DPRK [North Korea]," said a Korean People's Army spokesman in the statement.

"If the US side continues violating and misusing the armistice agreement as it pleases, there will be no need for the DPRK to remain bound to the AA [armistice agreement] uncomfortably."

North Korea has already warned the US against any military build-up in the region. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/2774003.stm
 
The US and South Korea have had these same exercises for years...the only thing that has changed has been the name. I believe that the name is now Ulchi Focus Lens, or some such.
 
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