Recent Korean history reveals a sobering possibility: It may only be a matter of time before North Korea
launches a sudden, deadly attack on the South. And perhaps more
unsettling, Seoul has vowed that this time, it will respond with an even
stronger blow.
Humiliated by past attacks, South Korea has promised — as recently as Tuesday — to hit back hard at the next assault from the North, opening up the prospect that a skirmish could turn into a wider war.
Lost in the headline-making North Korean bluster about nuclear
strikes on Washington in response to U.N. sanctions is a single sentence
in a North Korean army Supreme Command statement of March 5. It said
North Korea "will make a strike of justice at any target anytime as it
pleases without limit."
Those words have a chilling link
to the recent past, when Pyongyang, angry over perceived slights, took
its time before exacting revenge on rival South Korea. Vows of
retaliation after naval clashes with South Korea
in 1999 and 2009, for example, were followed by more bloodshed,
including attacks blamed on North Korea that killed 50 South Koreans in
2010.
Those attacks three years ago "are vivid reminders of the regime's
capabilities and intentions," Bruce Klingner, a former U.S. intelligence
official now at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, wrote in a
recent think tank posting.
Almost a mirror image of the current tensions happened in 2009, when
the U.N. approved sanctions over North Korean missile and nuclear tests,
and Pyongyang responded with fury. In November of that year, Seoul
claimed victory in a sea battle with the North, and Pyongyang vowed
revenge.
In March 2010, the Cheonan, a 1,200-ton South Korean warship,
exploded and sank in the Yellow Sea, killing 46 sailors. A South
Korean-led international investigation found that North Korea torpedoed
the ship, a claim Pyongyang denies.
The Cheonan sinking may have been retaliation for the naval defeat
four months earlier, said Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea specialist at
Seoul's Dongguk University.
In November 2010, North Korea sent a warning to South Korea to cancel
a routine live-fire artillery drill planned on Yeonpyeong Island, which
is only seven miles from North Korea and lies in Yellow Sea waters that
North Korea claims as its own.
South Korea went ahead with the drills, firing, Seoul says, into
waters away from North Korean territory. North Korea sent artillery
shells raining down on the island, killing two civilians and two
marines.
South Korea responded with artillery fire of its own, but the
government of then-President Lee Myung-bak was severely criticized for
what was seen as a slow, weak response. Lee, a conservative who
infuriated North Korea by ending the previous liberal government's
"sunshine policy" of huge aid shipments with few strings attached, vowed
massive retaliation if hit again by the North.
The government of newly inaugurated President Park Geun-hye, also a
conservative, has made similar comments, though she has also said she
will try to build trust with North Korea and explore renewed dialogue
and aid shipments.
South Korea's Defense Ministry on Tuesday repeated that it would
respond harshly to any future attack from the North. Spokesman Kim
Min-seok said there were no signs that North Korea would attack anytime
soon, but warned that if it did, it would suffer "much more powerful
damage" than whatever it inflicted on South Korea.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Monday visited artillery troops
near disputed waters with South Korea and urged them to be on "maximum
alert" because war could break out anytime, according to Pyongyang's
official media.
If war broke out, the United States would assume control of South
Korea's military because of the countries' decades-old alliance that
began with the U.S.-led military response to North Korean invaders in
1950. But South Korea has made clear that it has a sovereign right, and a
political necessity, to respond strongly to future North Korean
attacks.
A clue to when North Korea might attack may be in the timing of the
current threats. North Korea is furious over ongoing annual U.S.-South
Korean military drills that will continue until the end of April.
Pyongyang is highly unlikely to stage an attack when so much U.S.
firepower is assembled, but analysts said it might hit South Korea after
the drills end.
"They are quiet when tension is high and state-of-the-art (U.S.)
weapons are brought to South Korea for the drills," said Chon Hyun-joon,
an analyst at the government-funded Korea Institute for National
Unification in Seoul.
If history is any guide, the most likely flashpoint is the Yellow
Sea, where North Korea has complained about sea boundaries since the
1950s. The U.S.-led U.N. Command drew the so-called Northern Limit Line
after failed attempts to negotiate a border after the Korean War, and
Pyongyang says it clearly favors the South by boxing in North Korea
close to its shores.
Bloody sea battles in 1999, 2002 and 2009, and North Korea's
artillery bombardment of Yeonpyeong Island in 2010, took place weeks
after annual drills by South Korea and the United States, Chon said. In
those cases and in the current drills, North Korea's state media reacted
to the war games with harsh criticism, calling them preparations for a
northward invasion.
North Korea sometimes takes months to follow through on its
occasionally cryptic threats or warnings, but it also has acted quickly.
North Korea has attempted a
military provocation within weeks of every South Korean presidential
inauguration dating back to 1992, according to Victor Cha, a former Asia
adviser to President George W. Bush, and Ellen Kim at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington. South
Korea's new president was inaugurated Feb. 25.


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