US defies North Korea with drills with 230 aircraft

epa06366223 An American EA-18G Growler electronic warfare aircraft lands after completing a Korea-U.S. air force drill, at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, 04 December 2017. The five-day Vigiliant ACE joint exercise began earlier in the day, and is held partly in response to North Korea's unwavering nuclear and missile programs.  EPA-EFE/YONHAP SOUTH KOREA OUT

Bloomberg

The US and South Korea on Monday began a five-day joint air exercise on the Korean peninsula involving 230 aircraft and 12,000 American troops, in what North Korea has dubbed the largest-ever joint aerial drill.
North Korea, which last week launched a new type of intercontinental ballistic missile, said ahead of the Vigilant Ace 18 drills that it would consider the “highest-level hard-line countermeasure in history,” according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency. It referred to a similar statement in September, which Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho said may include a ground-level test of a hydrogen bomb in the Pacific Ocean.
North Korea regularly cites military drills around the peninsula as justification for its nuclear and missile-testing program. The isolated regime on Nov. 29 launched an ICBM with improved technology that can deliver a nuclear warhead anywhere in the US, and claimed it had completed its nuclear force.
The exercise is similar in size to previous drills, but with the inclusion of six F-22s, six F-35As and 12 F-35B fighters, according to a US military statement. The US and South Korea said the exercises are an annual event were aimed at ensuring peace and security on the peninsula. Yonhap News reported that the allies planned to stage simulated attacks on mock North Korean nuclear and missile targets.
White House National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster told Fox News that North Korea was the greatest immediate threat to the US, saying that the potential for war “is increasing every day.” Sen. Lindsey Graham said it’s time to start moving the families of American military personnel out of South Korea. “It’s crazy to send thousands of children to South Korea, given the provocation of North Korea,” the member of the Senate Armed Services Committee said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

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