KCNA on U.S. Dangerous Military Moves
Korean Central News Agency of DPRK via Korea News Service (KNS)
Pyongyang, April 30 (KCNA) -- The U.S. has gone into extremes in its wild ambition to establish its political and military domination over the Asia-Pacific region. The U.S. is contemplating replacing the present system whereby the U.S. troops are stationed in limited regions and countries on a permanent basis by a new system whereby they are reorganized into "task forces" having fast maneuverability and armed with high-tech hardware to be deployed in different parts of the world.
The U.S. is stepping up in real earnest the work to redeploy the U.S. forces favorable for carrying out wars of aggression under the pretext of "redeployment of U.S. troops worldwide" to suit "a new security environment".
This is clearly evidenced by the fact that the U.S. is working hard to turn the U.S. troops present in south Korea into a "vast regional force" and, at the same time, keep huge armed forces capable of playing the function of a joint command of the three services in Japan through the transfer of the 1st corps of the U.S. Army.
Through the large-scale war drills staged across south Korea in March, the U.S. examined the capability of the U.S. troops present in south Korea to extend the sphere of their operation to the vicinity of the Korean Peninsula any moment after making them play the role of a "vast regional force."
In this course the U.S. intends to achieve the purpose of enabling its forces in south Korea to have the capacity to mount a more prompt and effective preemptive attack upon the DPRK and, at the same time, turn the Korean Peninsula into an advance base for its war of aggression against the Northeast Asian countries.
The U.S. planned establishment of a maritime anti-missile system in the East Sea of Korea is part of its moves to round off its preparations for mounting a preemptive attack upon the DPRK and laying a military siege to China and Russia in a bid to realize its hegemonic ambition to dominate the Asia-Pacific region.
The Asia-Pacific region still remains the focus of the U.S. world strategy.
The main thrust of the U.S. Asia strategy is to deter by force other big powers from expanding the sphere of their influence in this region and thus establish the American-style order of domination there.
As generally known, the U.S. Northeast Asian security strategy is aimed at maintaining the Cold War structure for containing the DPRK, China and other countries on the basis of its security alliance with Japan and south Korea.
Japan proper and Okinawa are used by the U.S. as advance attack bases of its forces in Northeast Asia as they are near from the Korean Peninsula and hosts many U.S. military bases.
Precisely for this reason one may say there exist in Japan "U.S. conning towers" for commanding the three services of its forces present in different parts of the Asia-Pacific region.
The U.S. seeks to use Japan as the most important stronghold from which to carry out its Asian strategy, the strategy of containing the DPRK and big powers in a bid to establish domination over the region.
It is by no means fortuitous that experts observed the U.S. is keen to use Japan as a key position of brains and information in the Asia-Pacific region through the realignment and reorganization of the U.S. troops".
Such U.S. military moves are fraught with potential danger.
The U.S. troops in south Korea and Japan have been reorganized in such a way as to carry out the strategy of long-range operation. This made it impossible for south Korea and Japan to escape regional disputes and international armed clashes.
The reorganization of the U.S. forces present in the Asia-Pacific region is nothing but, from every point of view, a redeployment aimed at a new war of aggression, a prelude to the war.
The U.S. is chiefly to blame for escalating tensions in the Korean Peninsula and the rest of Northeast Asia.
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