U.S. speeds attack plans for North Korea
By Bill Gertz
11/03/06 -- - "Washington
Times" -- -- The Pentagon has stepped
up planning for attacks against North Korea's nuclear program
and is bolstering nuclear forces in Asia, said defense officials
familiar with the highly secret process.
The officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the
accelerated military planning includes detailed programs for
striking a North Korean plutonium-reprocessing facility at
Yongbyon with special operations commando raids or strikes with
Tomahawk cruise missiles or other precision-guided weapons.
The effort, which had been under way for several months, was
given new impetus by Pyongyang's underground nuclear test Oct. 9
and growing opposition to the nuclear program of Kim Jong-il's
communist regime, especially by China and South Korea.
A Pentagon official said the Department of Defense is
considering "various military options" to remove the program.
"Other than nuclear strikes, which are considered excessive,
there are several options now in place. Planning has been
accelerated," the official said.
A second, senior defense official privy to the effort said the
Bush administration recently affirmed its commitment to both
South Korea and Japan that it would use U.S. nuclear weapons to
deter North Korea, now considered an unofficial nuclear weapon
state.
"We will resort to whatever force levels we need to have, to
defend the Republic of Korea. That nuclear deterrence is in
place," said the senior official, who declined to reveal what
nuclear forces are deployed in Asia.
Other officials said the forces include bombs and air-launched
missiles stored at Guam, a U.S. island in the western Pacific,
that could be delivered by B-52 or B-2 bombers. Nine U.S.
nuclear-missile submarines regularly deploy to Asian waters from
Washington state.
The officials said one military option calls for teams of Navy
SEALs or other special operations commandos to conduct covert
raids on Yongbyon's plutonium-reprocessing facility.
The commandos would blow up the facility to prevent further
reprocessing of the spent fuel rods, which provides the material
for developing nuclear weapons.
A second option calls for strikes by precision-guided Tomahawk
missiles on the reprocessing plant from submarines or ships. The
plan calls for simultaneous strikes from various sides to
minimize any radioactive particles being carried away in the
air.
Planners estimate that six Tomahawks could destroy the
reprocessing plant and that it would take five to 10 years to
rebuild.
Asked about the strike planning, Pentagon spokesman Bryan
Whitman said the U.S. government is seeking a "peaceful,
diplomatic solution" to the threat posed by North Korea.
Regarding any military options, Mr. Whitman said, "The U.S.
military is prepared and capable of carrying out all of its
assigned missions." The planning does not mean that the United
States will attack, only that military forces are ready to do so
if President Bush orders strikes. Concerned about threats from
rogue states such as North Korea, Mr. Bush called for a
ballistic missile defense system, parts of which are
operational.
Defense officials said a key factor in the ramped-up planning
effort is China's new attitude toward North Korea. Beijing's
leaders, upset that North Korea conducted the test, supported a
U.S.-led United Nations' resolution.
Chinese opposition to military action had limited defense
planning, the officials said. In the past, U.S. military plans
required warning Beijing, a move considered likely to compromise
any planned action because of the close military ties between
China and North Korea.
The Bush administration regards the new level of Chinese support
as a "green light" for more aggressive military planning.
U.S. officials think North Korea will conduct another
underground test soon because Pyongyang is demanding to be
recognized as a declared nuclear power. Both China and the U.S.
gauged the test as only partially successful.
The Yongbyon plant, 32 miles from the coast and a half-mile from
a river, is considered a key target because U.S. intelligence
agencies suspect that it is where the plutonium fuel used in the
Oct. 9 test was produced.
Defense planners also said equipment destroyed at Yongbyon would
be difficult to replace once newly approved U.N. sanctions are
in place. Another set of targets could be the nuclear test site
near Kilchu, in northeastern North Korea. That site includes
several research and testing-control facilities in the mountains
-- and possibly one more tunnel where a nuclear device could be
set off, the officials said.
Recent intelligence reports also provided new information about
Pyongyang's uranium-enrichment program, which remains hidden in
underground facilities in northern North Korea, the officials
said.
The U.S. Special Operations Command has been planning raids
against North Korean nuclear facilities for some time. It has
conducted training for joint operations with South Korean
special forces as well as unilateral U.S. operations.
U.S. Pacific Command spokesman Capt. Jeff Alderson declined to
comment on military planning but said the command is continuing
to shift forces to the Pacific and has four missile-defense
ships deployed in Japan.
Mr. Bush said recently that any transfer of nuclear weapons by
North Korea would be a "grave threat," phrasing viewed as
diplomatic code for a military response. Defense officials said
the military option will be used if North Korea is caught
transferring nuclear arms to other states or terrorist groups.
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