North Korea vowed to launch "retaliatory military action" against South Korea on Friday (06/03/2011). The threat comes days after South Korea said its military had used pictures of Kim Jong Il's family as target practice shooting.
From now on, the North will launch a military action that is more practical and thoroughly to remove the traitor in one sweep.
Strong statements that North Korea aimed at South Korea's conservative government under the leadership of President Lee Myung-bak. Lee is known attitude harder than its predecessor government.
Pyongyang saw "no point in sitting opposite with a group of traitor Lee" and believe that the only way to resolve differences with Seoul is "by force of arms." The statement asked North Korean armed forces spokesman.
"From now on, the North will launch a military action that is more practical and thoroughly to remove the traitor in a single sweep," the statement said.
Since the ruling, Lee often targeted North Korean criticism. Lee also cut off aid to North Korea unconditionally and linking the South with the help of North Korea's nuclear project disarmament efforts. Pyongyang has called Lee as a traitor reunification of Korea.
North gres threat seemed most related to the use of photo Kim Jong Il, his father Kim Il Sung, and his oldest son Kim Jong-un as a practice target shooting South Korean military units. The use of such targets that began after the North's artillery attacks to the island borders November 2010. Last week, South Korean Defense Ministry ordered the military re-use standard target boards.
Kim family cult in North Korea. The photos they must be respected and protected. In emergency conditions, photos Kim Jong Il and Kim Il Sung had to be rescued first. Though dead, Kim Il Sung had become "eternal president" communist country.
South Korea did not comment on North Korean statement. Instead the United States (U.S.), which reacts. "We expect North Korea put its relationship with South Korea on a more positive path. But it did not seem to happen," said Mark Toner, a spokesman for the U.S. State Department in Washington.
(source:Kompas)
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