Today at the Pentagon, U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel announced the deployment of 14 missile interceptors in Alaska and the installation of a radar system in Japan, in response to North Korea’s belligerent rhetoric. “The collective result of these … decisions will be to further improve our ability to counter future missile threats from Iran and North Korea … ,” Hagel said at a press conference.
This announcement was made at a moment of growing tension with North Korea, which threatened the United States earlier this month with a “preemptive nuclear attack” just before the U.N. security adviser approved a new set of forceful sanctions against Kim Jong-un’s regime for its underground nuclear testing last month. According to what was published in Rodong Sinmun, the official newspaper of the North Korean party, the U.S. “will be engulfed in a sea of fire” in the event of armed conflict.
“One of the reasons we're doing what we're doing based on the intelligence we have is to assure that whatever their timelines are we're not reacting to those timelines, that we're ahead of any timelines of any potential threat ,” said the new Secretary of Defense. Hagel declared that the additional interceptors will be in operation by the end of 2017 but did not mention when they will be deployed.
Experts confirm that North Korea is still far from being able to attack the United States with a nuclear weapon despite decades of work to build its nuclear abilities. “North Korea's shrill public pronouncements underscore the need for the U.S. to continue to take prudent steps to defeat any future North Korean ICBM,” emphasized James Miller, the Defense Department's policy chief. Miller added that the Pentagon was beginning environmental impact studies at the behest of Congress to deploy more interceptors in three specific locations if necessary.
The 14 interceptors that the Department of Defense plans to deploy will join the 26 already stationed in Fort Greely, Alaska. Their placement will reinforce the ability of the system to intercept long-range missiles in flight that could reach U.S. territory. Currently, the U.S. has four of these missile interceptors installed at the aerial base in Vandenberg, Calif.
The Pentagon’s decision rectifies a decision by the Obama administration in 2010 to limit the number of interceptors in Alaska to 30. The Bush administration had planned the deployment of a total of 44, some of which are among those slated for deployment currently.
El secretario de Defensa norteamericano, Chuck Hagel, ha anunciado hoy en el Pentágono el despliegue de 14 interceptores de misiles en Alaska y la instalación de un radar en Japón, ante la retórica beligerante de Corea del Norte. “Vamos a fortalecer nuestras capacidades de defensa de misiles en varias formas, debido a las crecientes amenazas de Irán y Corea del Norte”, ha dicho Hagel en rueda de prensa.
El anuncio se produce en un momento de creciente tensión con Corea del Norte, que amenazó a principios de mes a Estados Unidos con “un ataque nuclear preventivo” poco antes de que el Consejo de Seguridad de Naciones Unidas aprobara una batería de nuevas y contundentes sanciones contra el régimen de Kim Jong-un por su ensayo nuclear subterráneo del mes pasado. "Los regímenes marioneta de EEUU y Corea del Sur serán convertidos en un mar de fuego en un abrir y cerrar de ojos", en caso de estallar una contienda, según publicó Rodong, periódico oficial del partido único norcoreano.
“La razón por la que hacemos lo que hacemos”, ha explicado Hagel sobre la decisión tomada, “es para no arriesgarnos y estar preparados ante cualquier amenaza”, ha dicho el nuevo secretario de Defensa. Hagel ha declarado que los interceptores adicionales estarán operativos para finales de 2017, pero no ha mencionado cuando serán desplegados.
Los expertos afirman que Corea del Norte aún está lejos de poder atacar a Estados Unidos con un arma nuclear pese a décadas de trabajo para construir su capacidad nuclear. “Los estridentes pronunciamientos públicos de Corea del Norte hacen necesario que EE UU continúe sus pasos prudentes para derrotar cualquier futuro ataque nuclear o de misiles balísticos intercontinentales”, ha puntualizado James Miller, responsable de política del Departamento de Defensa. Miller ha añadido que el Pentágono estaba iniciando estudios de impacto medioambiental a instancias del Congreso para desplegar en tres lugares específicos más bases de interceptores para el caso de que sean necesarias.
Los 14 interceptores que planea desplegar Defensa se unirán a los 26 ya existentes en Fort Greely, Alaska. Su colocación reforzará la capacidad del sistema para interceptar misiles de largo alcance en vuelo que podrían alcanzar territorio estadounidense. En la actualidad, EEUU tiene cuatro de esos interceptores de misiles ya instalados en la base aérea de Vanderberg, California.
La decisión del Pentágono rectifica una decisión de la Administración de Barack Obama de 2010 de limitar el número de interceptores en Alaska a 30. La Administración de George W. Bush planeó el despliegue de un total de 44, que finalmente son los que va a haber ahora.
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It wouldn’t have cost Trump anything to show a clear intent to deter in a strategically crucial moment; it wouldn’t even have undermined his efforts in Ukraine.
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It wouldn’t have cost Trump anything to show a clear intent to deter in a strategically crucial moment; it wouldn’t even have undermined his efforts in Ukraine.