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N. Korea missile tech a 'concern': US commander
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) April 11, 2012


North Korea's increasingly sophisticated missile technology is a concern to Asia and the United States, the new US Pacific commander said Wednesday ahead of Pyongyang's planned rocket launch.

"We have seen over time the North Koreans pursue increasingly sophisticated ballistic missile defence technologies," Admiral Samuel Locklear, the head of the US Pacific Command based in Hawaii, said in Tokyo during his first visit to Japan in the role.

"And I understand that if they are able to achieve their capabilities over the long run that they are pursuing... it will increase the potential ranges of the missile technology that they have and they could proliferate.

"And this... will be a concern for the alliance, a concern for the region as well as a concern for the United States," he said.

He declined to say how far advanced he believed North Korea's missile technology was, but added "hopefully the North Koreans would make the decision to de-escalate... and they would not continue to pursue the missile technology which has a destabilising effect on the security of the region."

Shortly after Locklear spoke, North Korea announced it was fuelling the rocket it says will propel a satellite into orbit to collect data on forests and natural resources within its territory.

The West says it is a disguised ballistic missile test, in violation of a United Nations ban, and fears that North Korea will follow up with a third nuclear test.

Locklear, who oversees more than 300,000 service members and a fleet of aircraft and warships over an area spanning the west coast of the United States to the western border of India, said he knew little about any atomic test.

"Beyond (what) you have seen in that open press reporting, I have no further information," he said.

Locklear was nominated for the post in December after a year in which US President Barack Obama repeatedly stressed the strategic importance of the Asia-Pacific region and vowed to expand the American military's presence, announcing the deployment of up to 2,500 US Marines in Australia.

The admiral told reporters in Tokyo he was looking to strengthen existing alliances in the region.

"When you look at... the rebalancing, you should look at the totality of what's happening within the Japanese-US alliance... the cooperation, the interoperability. It goes well beyond just the issue of ballistic missile defence" that Tokyo and Washington are jointly developing, he said.

"It goes into information-sharing. It goes into cyber. It goes into all the aspects that make a good alliance better."

A US congressional advisory report released last month said China's cyber warfare capabilities would pose a danger to US military forces in the event of a conflict over Taiwan.

The report by defence contractor Northrop Grumman for the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission said China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) has placed great emphasis on what is known as "information confrontation".

The US "commitment to Japan and the region is unwavering, and we are working to ensure that our alliance is fully capable of meeting all the challenges we might face in the future," Locklear said.

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S. Korea, US military discuss North's rocket, nuclear
Seoul (AFP) April 11, 2012 - Military chiefs of South Korea and the United States on Wednesday pledged close cooperation in responding to the North's planned rocket launch and a potential nuclear test, a Seoul official said.

The chairman of South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), Jung Seung-Jo, had a telephone discussion with his US counterpart Martin Dempsey and the top US Pacific Commander Samuel Locklear, a JCS spokesman told AFP.

"The three assessed the situation on the rocket launch plan and agreed to closely cooperate in case of another provocation like the North's potential nuclear test," he said.

The impoverished but nuclear-armed North is set to launch a rocket between April 12 and 16 which it says is to put a satellite into orbit to mark the centenary of the birth of its late founding president Kim Il-Sung.

Countries including the US, the South and Japan see it as a disguised long-range ballistic missile test banned under UN resolutions. The US has suspended planned food aid to the North that had been offered in return for a freeze of some nuclear and missile activities.

Pyongyang however said Wednesday that the fuelling of the rocket was underway in defiance of international condemnation, reiterating its claim that the launch is a peaceful space project.

The South's military has stepped up its alert ahead of the controversial launch by sending warships and Aegis destroyers to the Yellow Sea off the west coast to detect the trajectory of the rocket, Yonhap news agency said.

"The missile-detection systems of the US and the South's military are currently under operation," Yonhap news agency quoted a military source as saying.

The South Korean-US combined forces in Seoul have raised a five-stage surveillance system on the North's military movements by one notch to the second-highest, it added. A spokesman for the US forces declined to comment.

A Seoul official has said the North appears to be preparing for a third nuclear test in the northeastern town of Punggye-ri, where it carried out two previous tests in 2006 and 2009.

Recent satellite images indicate construction of a new underground tunnel for staging another nuclear test is almost complete, the official told AFP on Sunday on condition of anonymity.

The North, believed to have enough plutonium for six to eight bombs, tested atomic weapons in October 2006 and May 2009. Both were held one to three months after missile tests.



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NUKEWARS
North Korea rocket installed on launch pad
Tongchang-Ri Space Centre, North Korea (AFP) April 8, 2012
North Korea's long-range rocket is on its launch platform, AFP reporters said Sunday, as the regime again insisted it was to send a peaceful satellite and not a missile. The usually secretive North organised an unprecedented visit for foreign reporters to Tongchang-ri space centre in an effort to show its Unha-3 rocket is not a disguised ballistic missile, as claimed by the US and its allies ... read more


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