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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un guides a military drill
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un guides a military drill. The communist state is again threatening strikes at South Korean targets. Photograph: Korean Central News Agency/EPA
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un guides a military drill. The communist state is again threatening strikes at South Korean targets. Photograph: Korean Central News Agency/EPA

North Korea threatens to destroy South's propaganda loudspeakers

This article is more than 8 years old

Pyongyang says broadcasts coming from the South are a ‘grave military provocation’ and demands they be halted immediately

North Korea’s military on Saturday warned of imminent strikes on South Korean border units and issued fresh nuclear weapons threats against the US in response to what it called “grave” provocations from both.

The warnings came amid escalating military tensions on the Korean peninsula following a landmine attack South Korea blamed on the North and before a major South Korea-US joint military exercise condemned by Pyongyang.

After the mine blasts which maimed two South Korean soldiers on border patrol, Seoul recently resumed high-decibel propaganda broadcasts across the heavily militarised frontier, using batteries of loudspeakers that had lain silent for more than a decade.

Pyongyang rejected accusations it was behind the mine incident as “absurd”, and its frontline army border command on Saturday said the broadcasts were a “grave military provocation” and demanded they be halted immediately.

Failure to do so would trigger “an all-out military action of justice to blow up all means for ‘anti-north psychological warfare’ in all areas along the front,” the command said in a statement carried by the North’s official KCNA news agency.

All South Korean units involved in the broadcasts “whether they are fixed or mobile, will never escape the strikes,” it added.

The threat came a day after North Korea said it would turn Seoul into a “sea of fire” if South Korean activists continue the practice of launching propaganda leaflets across the border by helium balloon.

The nuclear-armed North regularly ups its bellicose rhetoric before and during the series of joint military exercises South Korea holds with its US ally every year.

Monday sees the start of the two week-long “Ulchi Freedom” drill which involves tens of thousands of South Korean and US troops in a wargame that simulates an invasion by North Korea.

On Saturday, the North’s powerful National Defence Commission threatened the United States with the “strongest military counter-action” should the joint exercise go ahead.

The North Korean army and people “are no longer what they used to be in the past when they had to counter the US nukes with rifles,” the commission said in a statement.

It is now an “invincible power equipped with both latest offensive and defensive means ... including nuclear deterrence,” it said.

Only by dropping its “hostile” policies against North Korea could the US “ensure the security of its mainland”.

The fresh warnings came as both Koreas celebrated on Saturday the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Korean peninsula from Japanese colonial rule.

Earlier this year, there had been hopes the anniversary might be an opportunity for some sort of inter-Korean rapprochement, but instead inter-Korean ties have been on a downward trajectory for months.

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