Flash Point North Korea by Richard A Mobley
Author:Richard A Mobley [Mobley, Richard A.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781612513560
Publisher: Naval Institute Press
North Korea Responds
After the incident, North Korean forces, especially those with air defense missions, assumed a high state of alert. NKAF aircraft that had been near the west coast moved inland. The Northâs overall posture was defensive, just as it had been after the Pueblo incident; it did not appear to be preparing for more provocations.52 The British also discerned no evidence that the North intended further provocative action.53
North Korea broadcast its version of events quite quicklyâabout two hours after the incident.54 North Korean media coverage (for both domestic and international audiences) remained unwaveringly hostile and unrepentant throughout the crisis. (To this day, the North Korean media lauds both the seizure of Pueblo and the EC-121 shootdown as major accomplishments!) Had there been confusion in the hierarchy, as might be expected after an accidental downing, the North might not have issued a press release so quickly or been so consistent in its story. Instead, the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) and Pyongyang Home Service repeatedly made the following points:
â¢With a âsingle shot,â the KPA downed a U.S. reconnaissance aircraft flying at âa high altitudeâ and âdeepâ into DPRK airspace. As if to leave no doubt about the certainty of Pyongyangâs cause, virtually every press comment claimed that the aircraft had been âdeepâ in North Korean airspace.55
â¢The United States had engaged in an extensive aerial reconnaissance program against North Korea for years. The press claimed that in 1965, RB-47 and L-19 aircraft had penetrated DPRK airspace. North Korea also claimed that after the Pueblo seizure, RB-47s, RB-57s, EC-121s, and RC-130s had conducted âaerial espionageâ several hundred times against the North.56
â¢Defense Minister âOrder Number 24â commended the KPAâs â896 Unitâ for conducting the shootdown. The citation warned that the âsituation remains tenseâ and exhorted the unit to âstep up military and political training.â57
â¢Even before the shootdown, the United States had been intensifying provocations along the DMZ and had been conducting exercises such as Focus Retina. The very first English-language KCNA report on the shootdown devoted its first paragraph to saying that Washington was âintensifying the war provocation maneuversâ against North Korea and flying the reconnaissance mission âwhile perpetrating grave provocations along the Military Demarcation Line.â58
â¢Most commentary warned that North Korea would retaliate if there were further provocations. For example, the Pyongyang Home Service stated, âour people and the KPA will return retaliation for the retaliation of the U.S. imperialists and all-out war for all-out war.â59
At the height of the crisis, during the last week of April 1969, the North Korean government issued a lengthy statement encapsulating its position. Broadcast to both domestic and international audiences, the statement incorporated the above themes and added other familiar North Korean foreign policy constructs. The following quotes from its text summarize the DPRKâs public posture throughout the EC-121 crisis:
The U.S. imperialistsâ reconnaissance planes have in recent months flown about the territorial air of our Republic to commit acts of espionage on several occasions and the [EC-121] had intruded deep into the territorial air of the Republic to conduct hostile acts of espionage.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Radium Girls by Kate Moore(11930)
100 Deadly Skills by Clint Emerson(4845)
Rise and Kill First by Ronen Bergman(4705)
The Templars by Dan Jones(4629)
The Doomsday Machine by Daniel Ellsberg(4420)
The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang(4139)
Killing England by Bill O'Reilly(3953)
Hitler in Los Angeles by Steven J. Ross(3901)
Stalin by Stephen Kotkin(3883)
12 Strong by Doug Stanton(3511)
Hitler's Monsters by Eric Kurlander(3269)
Blood and Sand by Alex Von Tunzelmann(3140)
The Code Book by Simon Singh(3077)
Darkest Hour by Anthony McCarten(3072)
The Art of War Visualized by Jessica Hagy(2945)
Hitler's Flying Saucers: A Guide to German Flying Discs of the Second World War by Stevens Henry(2716)
Babylon's Ark by Lawrence Anthony(2622)
The Second World Wars by Victor Davis Hanson(2485)
Tobruk by Peter Fitzsimons(2447)