Pyongyang, North Korea (CNN)North Korea
has issued a forceful response to the deployment of a US naval strike
group to the region, saying it would counter "reckless acts of
aggression" with "whatever methods the US wants to take."
In
a statement provided to CNN by officials in North Korea, Pyongyang said
the "current grim situation" justified its "self-defensive and
pre-emptive strike capabilities with the nuclear force at the core."
"We will make the US fully accountable
for the catastrophic consequences that may be brought about by its
high-handed and outrageous acts," the statement said.
The
Pentagon sent the 97,000-ton USS Carl Vinson with an escort of a
guided-missile cruiser and two destroyers after the latest missile test
by North Korea last week.
On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump turned to Twitter over North Korea.
"I
explained to the President of China that a trade deal with the U.S.
will be far better for them if they solve the North Korean problem," he
tweeted.
"North Korea is looking
for trouble. If China decides to help, that would be great. If not, we
will solve the problem without them! U.S.A.," he wrote in a second
tweet.
Want to Burn Fat 24 Hours per day?
Complicated scenario
Carrying
more than 5,000 sailors and 60 aircraft, the USS Carl Vinson is
escorted by guided-missile destroyers USS Wayne E. Meyer and USS Michael
Murphy and the guided-missile cruiser USS Lake Champlain.
Analysis of North Korean statement
"While
at face value harsh and aggressive, the North Korea statement issued
Tuesday is no more confrontational than usual, probably more in the
range of 7 or 8 on North Korea's rhetorical volume knob.
But that does not dilute their message, or express a sign of willingness to compromise. The language states the DPRK's viewpoint quite simply, without any sign of softening or hardening of their already very firmly stated positions.
This is not the first, second or even third time the Carl Vinson has visited these waters over the years. The current tasking of the aircraft carrier group will not have any success in persuading Pyongyang to halting or even slowing down its nuclear weapons program, everything points to it having the opposite effect."
-- Tim Schwarz, CNN Beijing Bureau chief, writing from Pyongyang
But that does not dilute their message, or express a sign of willingness to compromise. The language states the DPRK's viewpoint quite simply, without any sign of softening or hardening of their already very firmly stated positions.
This is not the first, second or even third time the Carl Vinson has visited these waters over the years. The current tasking of the aircraft carrier group will not have any success in persuading Pyongyang to halting or even slowing down its nuclear weapons program, everything points to it having the opposite effect."
-- Tim Schwarz, CNN Beijing Bureau chief, writing from Pyongyang
The
group's ships and air wing provide significant firepower and strike
capability, but balancing the available military options with the
potential of retaliation from North Korea presents a complicated
scenario for President Trump.
China -- North Korea's closest ally -- has pressed the US to engage in direct diplomatic negotiations with North Korea.
US
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Sunday that Beijing understands
how dangerous North Korea's nuclear program has become and agrees action
must be taken to stop it, but China hasn't signaled any change in its
approach to Pyongyang since a summit between Trump and Chinese President
Xi last week.
US allies South
Korea and Japan, which has seen previous North Korean missile tests fall
within 200 miles of its coast, both supported the deployment of the
Vinson group.
South Korea said the
group's deployment was recognition of the "grave situation on the Korean
Peninsula," while Japan said it was "important to secure the power of
US deterrence."
The White House
faces a tough task in convincing North Korea to give up its nuclear
program, retired Gen. Michael Hayden, a former head of the CIA and
National Security Agency told CNN's "New Day."
"No matter what we do there is this move by North Korea to build missiles and put weapons on top of missiles," Hayden said.
"This
is what they count on for regime survival. ... The best we can do is
box it where it is right now," he said. "I don't think we can make them
give up the program."
Missile intercept
Many
analysts believe the movement of US warships is likely defensive in
nature, setting the stage for a scenario in which the Vinson strike
group could be called upon to perform a missile intercept.
The
three escort warships traveling with the Vinson have more than 300
combined missile tubes and are outfitted with the Aegis anti-missile
system, according to Bruce Bennett, senior defense analyst at the think
tank Rand Corp.
"If North Korea
were to test some number of ballistic missiles by firing them into the
East Sea/Sea of Japan, these warships would have the potential of
intercepting the North Korean test missile," Bennett said.
Intercepting
a long-range rocket test passing overhead would send a clear message to
Kim and would be justifiable as the rockets would possibly be on course
to pass over Japan, according to Peter Layton, a visiting fellow at the
Griffith Asia Institute in Brisbane, Australia.
"The
Carl Vinson group is commanded from Hawaii, rather than the US military
base in Japan, so it's a clear American initiative not a Japanese or
South Korea one," Layton told CNN. "That may defuse attempts to link
Japan and South Korea and thus limit the possibility of any North Korean
aggression against them."
While
the carrier group has been deployed to the Korean Peninsula in the past,
lawmakers are wondering how the US warships will be directed to respond
to another North Korean missile test.
"Are
we going to try to shoot that intercontinental ballistic missile down?
Are we going to let the test go on unpaid on unimpeded? Republican Rep.
Will Hurd asked on CNN's "New Day." "These are questions that should be
asked of Congress."
Offensive strike capabilities
The
Trump administration has floated the idea of carrying out preemptive
strikes against North Korea, but the scope and method of potential
offensive actions remain unclear.
The
Vinson's air wing, made up of more than 40 F/A-18 Hornets, provides the
offensive capability to attack enemy targets with bombs or missiles
while the carrier's E/A-18G Growler aircraft have the ability to jam
enemy radars, disrupt enemy electronic surveillance and provide "cover"
for attacking aircraft.
"A potential US strike, using aircraft
from the Vinson, could range from a small-scale strike against a single
target, like a missile on a launch pad or the support equipment that
makes a missile launch possible, to a broader set of military targets if
the US meant to 'send a message' that an ICBM (intercontinental
ballistic missile) or atomic device test was not going to be tolerated,"
Dakota Wood, an analyst at the DC-based Heritage Foundation, told CNN.
But
the Vinson strike group may not have the weapons to take out North
Korea's nuclear assets, which are buried deep underground, Wood said.
"I
believe they would normally be delivered by bomber (B-2, B-1, or
perhaps B-52) which could fly from Andersen Air Base on Guam," he told
CNN.
On Tuesday, North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un was expected to attend the country's Supreme People's
Assembly, a high-profile gathering of the nation's leading political
figures.
The
meeting comes days before North Korea celebrates the April 15 birthday
of deceased leader Kim Il Sung, Kim's grandfather -- amid speculation
that Pyongyang will mark the occasion with by testing missiles or
possibly a nuclear device.
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