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The Dear Leader Calls for Holy War
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: America’s
Longest War Gets Worse
Christmas or
no Christmas, the Korean Peninsula is boiling once again, with threats
flying thicker than the winter snow along North Korea’s icy Yalu
River.
Last week,
North Korea threatened a nuclear "holy war" against South
Korea. The North Korean "Dear Leader," Kim Jong-il, has
repeatedly vowed to "liberate" South Korea, which he calls
an American colony.
Korean tempers
are as hot as their beloved national pickled cabbage dish, kimchi.
In South Korea,
there is open talk of "liberating" the North.
While a majority
of South Koreans favor negotiations and patience in dealing with
their difficult northern brothers, many conservatives in South Korea,
and particularly so Evangelical Christians, advocate military action
against the North.
Military forces
in both Koreas, China’s northeast, Japan, and Russia’s Far East
are on high alert. So are US forces in the region.
Chances still
are against full-scale conflict because both sides have so much
to lose. War would be a disaster for all 73 million Koreans. The
last Korean War, in the 1950’s, killed over two million Korean civilians
and left the nation’s cities in ruins.
North Korea
(DPRK) has a highly disciplined 950,000-man army with millions of
trained reservists. The North’s strongest arm is artillery: 18,000
heavy guns, mortars, and rocket batteries. Its powerful artillery
and large numbers of anti-aircraft guns in part compensates for
its lack of air power.
The DPRK’s
170mm long-ranged guns and 240mm rocket launchers dug into caves
in the steep hills of the Demilitarized Zone could destroy the northern
third of South Korea’s capitol, Seoul, which is only about 24 miles
away.
Another important
military asset of North Korea is its formidable special forces of
88,000-men that are tasked with deep penetration attacks and suicide
raids into South Korea.
By contrast,
North Korea’s 3,500 Soviet and Chinese-made 1960’s-technology tanks
are totally obsolete and would be quickly torn to pieces by South
Korea’s modern tanks and anti-tank helicopter gunships.
The North’s
air force is even weaker, with only 35 modern MiG-29 fighters and
some six hundred 1960’s vintage Soviet warplanes, many of them in
poor condition. In any war, the North’s air force and air bases
would soon be destroyed by air and missile strikes from South Korean
and US forces.
The North’s
weakness in the air and in armor, and chronic lack of fuel, mean
its ability to move south is limited. Such movement would also expose
the flanks, rear and supply lines of an advancing North Korean army
to amphibious attack like the brilliant US landing at Inchon during
the 1950’s Korean War.
Advancing North
Korean troops would come under intense air attack from South Korean
(ROK) and US warplanes and be forced to fight their way across seven
successive lines of coast-to-coast South Korean fortifications.
Anchored on the Sea of Japan and Yellow Sea, these defense lines
cannot be outflanked.
The only way
for the North Korean Army to move south is by an inevitably bloody
frontal attack. The Syrians had to fight their way across Israeli
fortifications, mine fields, and antitank ditches on the Golan Heights
in 1973, and suffering very heavy losses from hull-down, dug-in
Israeli tanks.
The existence
of South Korea’s defense works is officially denied by Seoul, but
this writer, who specializes in fortifications, has seen them: high
earth walls surmounted by platforms for tanks to fire hull down
(showing just their turrets); machine gun bunkers with interlocking
fire, dense belts of barbed wire, and broad minefields, backed by
heavy artillery and rocket batteries.
South Korea’s
tough army numbers 687,000 with 4 million reservists. I’ve been
on the DMZ with the ROK 2nd Division. As an old soldier and war
correspondent, I can say that South Korea’s troops are second to
none: tough, disciplined, highly trained and well equipped.
South Korea
has nearly 1,000 state-of-the-art tanks as well as 1,300 older American
ones, and 10,000 guns and mortars. The ROK air force has 491 combat
aircraft including 165 modern F-16 fighters and 39 F-15 interceptors,
and a large combat helicopter force. The South also has a modern
navy that should be able to fight off DPRK naval attacks.
Any war would
be joined by the 28,500 US military personnel based in South Korea,
US Stealth bombers, F-15’s and F-16’s from Japan, Okinawa, Guam,
Diego Garcia, Hawaii and Alaska. The US 7th Fleet with one or two
carrier battle groups would join battle. Follow-on reinforcements
would come from the United States.
North Korea’s
only chance of winning a conflict would be to launch a surprise
attack against the two most important US air bases in South Korea,
Osan and Kunsan, as well as major South Korean air bases, using
its special forces and barrages of missiles, possibly with chemical
warheads. The DPRK’s commandos are trained to assault enemy airfields
from the sea and from elderly AN-2 biplanes that are largely invisible
to radar and will crash land on runways, disgorging troops. North
Korean commandos are not expected to survive such attacks.
US and South
Korean headquarters, communications, and political offices in Seoul
and further south will be key targets of commando raids. This writer
has been in North Korean tunnels dug deep under the Demilitarized
Zone through which a 12,000-man DPRK division can pass in an hour
and emerge behind the first ROK defense line behind the DMZ.
North Korea
can only win if it swiftly knocks out US air bases on the peninsula
and in Japan and Okinawa. Japan would very likely become a major
North Korean target as it serves as a major US air and naval base,
a logistical hub, and would be the base for incoming US reinforcements.
Pyongyang has
even threatened to use nuclear weapons against Japan. The DPRK has
some one hundred medium-ranged missiles pointed at Japan, some of
which may be nuclear or chemical capable.
The US has
repeatedly hinted it is ready to employ tactical nuclear weapons
against North Korea, particularly if DPRK forces threaten to break
deep into South Korea, or the North uses nuclear weapons against
Japan or Okinawa.
Given the North’s
lack of air power, fuel shortages, and logistical vulnerability,
it appears unlikely DPRK forces could advance more than 100 miles
south before grinding to a halt.
A US air blitz
would devastate North Korea’s industry, ports, transport and political
targets. But a US ground offensive into North Korea appears unlikely:
Pentagon studies estimated a major US ground invasion of the North
could cost 250,000 American casualties.
There
is a growing danger that US naval and air forces could accidentally
clash with Chinese units in the strategic, highly sensitive Yellow
Sea to Korea’s west, or with Russian air or naval forces just to
the north near Vladivostok. China’s province of Manchuria, which
borders on North Korea and the Yellow Sea, is a highly strategic
military zone and has major military industries. China has warned
the US to stay out of the Yellow Sea.
If North Korea
were defeated in a war and crumbling, Chinese armies might cross
the Yalu River and intervene as they did in the 1950’s. As this
column has long been saying, it is most unlikely China would allow
North Korea to fall under South Korean and/or US control.
So the stakes
are very high in this Korean ChristmasNew Year crisis.
December
29, 2010
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2010 Eric Margolis
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