US sends warships to monitor North Korea missile test

As North Korea prepares to launch a satellite into space, Japan, South Korea and the U.S. ratchet up the tension by mobilizing anti-missile systems.   Again, the military is using the threat of missiles hitting Hawai’i as the reason for these provocative countermeasures.   What’s more disturbing is some of the chauvanistic comments on this article:

megook wrote:

Replying to SailorDale:

If they really launch a missile, as soon as it clears Communist N. Korean territory, they should not hesitate to shoot it down!!!! The US needs to “stand tall, and carry a great big stick”, telling that little commie pinhead NO You can’t do that!!!!
NO EXCUSES or P.C. garbage!!!! Say what we mean, & SHOW THEM we mean what we say!!!!!

EXACTLY! THEY’RE WRONG FLAG FLAG FLAG FLAG FLAG!!!!!11111 USA USA USA!!!!!111111 FLAG FLAG FLAG FLAG FLAG!!!!!!1111
03/30/2009 7:54:54 p.m.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090330/BREAKING/90330022

Updated at 7:10 p.m., Monday, March 30, 2009

Pearl-based Chafee among warships monitoring North Korea launch

Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea – Japanese, South Korean and U.S. missile-tracking ships – including the Pearl Harbor-based guided missile destroyer USS Chafee – set sail to monitor North Korea’s imminent rocket launch, as Pyongyang stoked tensions today by detaining a South Korean worker for allegedly denouncing the North’s political system.

North Korea says it will send up a communications satellite into orbit sometime between April 4 and 8. The U.S., South Korea and Japan suspect the regime is using the launch to test its long-range missile technology, warning it would face U.N. sanctions under a Security Council resolution banning the country from any ballistic activity.

North Korea has threatened to quit international disarmament talks on its nuclear programs if punished with sanctions. The country’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper reiterated that warning yesterday, saying the talks will “completely collapse” if taken to the Security Council.

Further heightening tensions on the divided peninsula, North Korean authorities detained a South Korean worker at a joint industrial zone in the North for allegedly denouncing Pyongyang’s political system and inciting female northern workers to flee the communist country.

North Korea assured Seoul it would guarantee the man’s safety during an investigation, according to the South Korean Unification Ministry, which handles relations with the North.

The detention comes as two American journalists working for former Vice President Al Gore’s Current TV media venture remain in North Korean custody after allegedly crossing the border illegally from China on March 17.

Late today, the North also threatened to take an unspecified “resolute countermeasure” against South Korea if it joins a U.S.-led international campaign aimed at stopping the spread of weapons of mass destruction.

South Korea has only been an observer to the Proliferation Security Initiative, but Seoul officials recently said they were considering fully joining the program after the North’s rocket launch.

Seoul’s participation would be treated as “a declaration of a war,” Pyongyang’s Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

In preparation for the rocket launch, Japan deployed Patriot missiles around Tokyo and sent warships armed with interceptors to the waters between Japan and the Korean peninsula as a precaution, defense officials said.

Two U.S. destroyers anchored at a South Korean port after holding military exercises with the South Korean navy also are believed to have departed for waters near North Korea to monitor the rocket launch.

The USS McCain and the USS Chafee left Busan today, a U.S. military spokesman said. He declined to disclose their destination and spoke on condition of anonymity, saying he was not authorized to discuss the ships’ routes.

South Korea also is dispatching its Aegis-equipped destroyer, according to a Seoul military official who asked not to be named, citing department policy.

All of the warships – of South Korea, Japan and the U.S. – are equipped with sophisticated combat systems enabling them to track and/or shoot down enemy missiles. However, leaders of all three countries have indicated it’s unlikely the warships will respond militarily to the North’s launch.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak said in an interview with the Financial Times published Monday that his government opposes any military response to the North’s launch, saying that would be unhelpful in talks on dismantling North Korea’s nuclear program.

In Washington, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in a TV interview aired Sunday that the U.S. has no plans to intercept the North Korean rocket but might consider it if an “aberrant missile” were headed to Hawaii “or something like that.”

Japan had earlier hinted that it might shoot down the rocket, but now says it will only fire interceptors if debris from a failed launch appears likely to hit Japanese territory.

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