North Korea places South island in crosshairs

SEOUL, Mar 12:  North Korea leader Kim Jong-Un threatened to “wipe out” a South Korean island as Pyongyang came under new economic and diplomatic fire today from US sanctions and UN charges of gross rights abuses.
Military tensions on the Korean peninsula have risen to their highest level for years, with the communist state under the youthful Kim threatening nuclear war in response to UN sanctions imposed after its third atomic test last month.
It has also announced its unilateral shredding of the 60-year-old Korean War armistice and non-aggression pacts with Seoul in protest at a joint South Korean-US military exercise that began yesterday.
While most of these statements have been dismissed as rhetorical bluster, the latest threat to the border island of Baengnyeong, which has around 5,000 civilian residents, appears credible and carries the weight of precedent.
In 2010, the South Korean naval vessel Cheonan was sunk in the area of Baengnyeong with the loss of 46 lives, and later that year North Korea shelled the nearby island of Yeonpyeong, killing four people.
On a visit yesterday to frontline artillery units, Kim Jong-Un briefed officers on plans for turning Baengnyeong into “a sea of flames”.
“Once an order is issued, you should break the waists of the crazy enemies, totally cut their windpipes and thus clearly show them what a real war is like,” Kim was quoted as saying by the Korean Central News Agency.
Priority targets included radar posts, Harpoon anti-ship missile launchers, 130mm multiple rocket stations and 150mm self-propelled howitzer batteries, Kim said.
An administrative official on Baengnyeong, Kim Young-Gu, said civilian emergency shelters on the island had been fully stocked and all village councils put on high alert.
“It’s not like there’s a mass exodus of panicked islanders to the mainland. But to be honest with you, we’re a bit scared,” he told AFP by telephone.
The disputed sea border off the west coast was the scene of deadly naval clashes in 1999, 2002 and 2009.
In Seoul, Defence Ministry spokesman Kim Min-Seok said the North Korean leader’s frontline visits were aimed at exerting “psychological pressure” on South Korea.
Kim said the North had already begun a series of naval drills using submarines and was expected to launch full-scale military manoeuvres in the coming days.
“If the North provokes us, we will respond in ways that will cause them more harm,” he said.
In a move likely to provoke a fresh round of furious rhetoric from Pyongyang, the United States yesterday slapped sanctions on North Korea’s primary foreign exchange bank and four senior officials.
The United States will “continue to work with allies and partners to tighten national and international sanctions to impede North Korea’s nuclear and missile programmes”, US national security advisor Tom Donilon said in New York. (AGENCIES)