North Korea Declares 'State of War' with Seoul

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North Korea on Saturday declared it had entered into a "state of war" with South Korea and warned Seoul and Washington that any provocation would swiftly escalate into an all-out nuclear conflict.

The United States said it took the announcement "seriously,” even though it followed a familiar pattern, while South Korea largely dismissed it as an old threat dressed in new clothing.

It was the latest in a string of dire-sounding pronouncements from Pyongyang that have been matched by tough warnings from Seoul and Washington, fueling international concern that the situation might spiral out of control.

"As of now, inter-Korea relations enter a state of war and all matters between the two Koreas will be handled according to wartime protocol," the North said in a government statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency.

"The long-standing situation of the Korean peninsula being neither at peace nor at war is finally over," the statement said, adding that any U.S. or South Korean provocation would trigger a "full-scale conflict and a nuclear war.”

The two Koreas have technically remained at war for the past six decades because the 1950-53 Korean War concluded with an armistice rather than a peace treaty.

The North had announced earlier this month that it was ripping up the armistice and other bilateral peace pacts signed with Seoul in protest against South Korea-U.S. joint military exercises.

Voiding the ceasefire theoretically opened the way to a resumption of hostilities, although the armistice was approved by the U.N. General Assembly, and both the U.N. and South Korea repudiated the North's unilateral withdrawal.

The White House labeled the latest statement from Pyongyang as "unconstructive" and, while taking it "seriously,” sought to place the immediate threat level in context.

"North Korea has a long history of bellicose rhetoric and threats and today's announcement follows that familiar pattern," said National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden.

In Seoul, the Unification Ministry insisted the war threat was "not really new" and the Defense Ministry added that no notable troop movement had been observed along the border.

Most observers still believe this will remain a verbal rather than a physical battle.

"The North Koreans in recent weeks have turned rhetoric into performance art," said Gordon Flake, a Korea specialist and executive director of the Mansfield Foundation in Washington.

"When they have already declared the armistice null and void, I do not think a declaration of war breaks new ground," Flake said.

But he added that the situation had now become so volatile that any slight miscalculation carried the potential for rapid escalation.

Russia called for "maxim responsibility and restraint” on Saturday.

"We expect all sides to show maximum responsibility and restraint and that no-one will cross the line after which there will be no return," Grigory Logvinov, a Russian foreign ministry pointman on North Korea, told the Interfax news agency.

Both China and Russia called for calm Friday, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov voicing particular concern.

"We can simply see the situation getting out of control, it would spiral down into a vicious circle," Lavrov told reporters at a news conference.

His warning came after North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un ordered missile units to prepare to strike U.S. mainland and military bases, so as to "settle accounts" after U.S. stealth bombers flew over South Korea.

The high-stakes standoff has its roots in North Korea's successful long-range rocket launch in December and the third nuclear test it carried out in February.

Both events drew U.N. sanctions that incensed Pyongyang, which then switched the focus of its anger to the annual joint South Korea-U.S. military drills.

As tensions escalated, Washington has maintained a notably assertive stance, publicizing its use of nuclear-capable B-52s and B-2 stealth bombers in the war games.

The long-distance deployment of both sets of aircraft out of bases in Guam and the U.S. mainland were intended as a clear signal of U.S. commitment to defending South Korea against any act of aggression.

Analysts have underlined that the threats and counter-threats from all sides have increasingly stressed a conditional element of the other acting first.

"But the danger is, when the North Koreans have threatened a nuclear attack on Washington, they may not know a limit on how much they can get away with," said Flake.

Comments 4
Thumb gebran_sons 30 March 2013, 07:44

North Korea, Iran, Hizbollah, Kaddafi, Saddam, Assad, Aoun... are all of the same making. They create desolate misery at whatever they touch but believe they are gift to their people as restoring honor and buying weapons. Poor idiots... can't they see North Korea's famine, Iran's Basij bankrupting a nation with unparalleled riches making a mockery of a glorious civilization, Hizbollah reducing the most enlightened Shia community in the world to mindless followers incapable of free thinking and strangers to freedom and democracy Lebanon's only virtue. These leaders are most dangerous and they'll willingly destroy their country for their own ego as proven by Saddam, Kaddafi, Assad and Aoun. Let them all go to hell so freedom and enlightenment have a chance to spring again in the land of Cedars.

Missing VINCENT 30 March 2013, 19:49

I like to go and live there. I am sure their cinemas play Bruce Lee movies, and, may be, if we are lucky the second feature would entail a movie called "Weekend with Dennis Rodman in a wedding dress".

Thumb sarkis 30 March 2013, 20:01

gebran_sons, what a beautiful post, reads like poetry

Missing eurybaric 30 March 2013, 14:03

Dude honestly, refute, argue, whatever, just don't feed the trolls! seriously, this website didn't have as many trolls before, and no matter how much cussing and insulting were there already, trolling is just... blegh! Cheers...