Beware
of N. Korea's Conventional Weapons, say Analysts
Seoul, Jan. 16 2003 (VOA News) -- While diplomats
around the world worry about the prospect of North
Korea building nuclear arms, some analysts say the
biggest immediate danger from the Stalinist state
is its conventional weapons.
While few analysts think fighting will break out on
the Korean Peninsula any time soon, a conflict would
be devastating. Some people wonder what could happen
if the current crisis is not defused. The
capital of South Korea, Seoul, is home to 10 million
people.
And
some say those 10 million are being held at gunpoint.
Buried deep into hills just beyond the Demilitarized
Zone separating North and South Korea are thousands
of North Korean cannons and rocket launchers. They
can hit Seoul and its suburbs with tens of thousands
of shells an hour.
Robert Einhorn is a former U.S. diplomat specializing
in weapons nonproliferation. He currently is a senior
advisor specializing in Asia at Center for Strategic
and International Studies, a U.S. think-tank.
"The
reason that the North has deployed so many of these
artillery tubes and rocket launchers along the DMZ
is precisely to have leverage against the South,"
he said. "These forward deployed conventional
forces hold Seoul hostage."
Diplomats
are conferring around the world to ease the dispute
over North Korea's nuclear ambitions.
Since
October, when the United States revealed that Pyongyang
had admitted having an illegal nuclear weapons program,
tensions in northeastern Asia have risen sharply.
North Korea has restarted an idled nuclear facility
capable of making weapons, it has kicked out international
nuclear monitors and hints it will resume missile
tests.
Pyongyang
says it will only address concerns about its weapons
programs if the United States first signs a non-aggression
treaty with it.
Washington says no to a treaty and has cut off fuel
aid to the impoverished country. However, President
Bush has offered to consider new aid programs if North
Korea renounces its nuclear efforts - an offer Pyongyang
has rebuffed.
While
North Korea is thought to have one or two nuclear
bombs, many analysts think they are less of an immediate
hazard than the country's one million soldiers - most
of them near the DMZ.
Seoul has almost 700,000 troops. Several defense analysts
say the South has fewer cannons, tanks and combat
aircraft than North Korea, but what it has is of better
quality. It also has plenty of food for its troops,
and fuel and spare parts for its weapons, which North
Korea probably lacks.
South
Korea also has an ally, the United States.
The
U.S. force in South Korea is small - only 37,000 troops.
In terms of defending Seoul, there is little they,
or the South Koreans could immediately do against
a North Korean bombardment or invasion.
Charles
Heyman is the editor of Jane's World Armies, and an
expert in the Korean Peninsula's military forces.
"The
American forces there are really, to a certain extent,
almost hostages," he said. "They are a sign
of intent to the South Korea government that the U.S.
intends to support them. It would be inconceivable
if there was an attack on South Korea that the Americans
would not reinforce like greased lightening to save
their troops there in the first instance and then
to support the South Koreans."
Within
a few hours flying time, the United States has more
than 100 combat aircraft that could strike back quickly
if conflict started. In theory, Washington could start
reinforcing South Korea within a month with tens of
thousands of troops and millions of tons of arms and
supplies.
But
for the people of Seoul, even a few weeks could be
too late.
It
is a familiar situation for many of the city's older
residents. In 1950, North Korea nearly flattened Seoul
within weeks of its surprise invasion of South Korea.
It took three years of fighting and negotiations to
end the Korean War.
Although
there have been reports of unusual North Korean troop
movements along the DMZ, analysts say North Korea
does not appear to be preparing for a new battle.
And, says Mr. Heyman at Jane's, Pyongyang can not
count on having the sort of success its invasion in
1950 had.
"The
logistics chain that the North Koreans would need
to do that massive attack is almost certainly now
totally exposed to both air power, cruise missiles
and long range artillery…," he said. "Remember,
as well, that they took people by surprise at the
beginning of the Korean War. That element of surprise
is not there anymore."
Adam
Ward, a specialist in East Asian security issues for
the International Institute for Strategic Studies
in London, warns that some sort of North Korean military
action can not be ruled out.
"It
would be foolish to rule it out, given the speed at
which North Korea has carried out some of the actions
that it has done…," he said. "I mean, they
have been running up the rungs of an escalation ladder,
if you like, with a certain amount of alacrity."
Given
how quickly Pyongyang has ratcheted up the dispute
over its nuclear programs, Mr. Ward says, it is quite
possible it might try some provocative armed action.
Among the possibilities are missile test launches,
naval skirmishes with the South Koreans and infiltration
by troops to spy on the South or conduct sabotage.
Most
Western military analysts agree that if the current
dispute flares into fighting, ultimately, North Korea
would lose. But before it does, millions of people,
many of them residents of Seoul, would die.
--
Kate Pound Dawson - Voice of America
in Hong Kong
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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