The military of the South Korean Government is developing a new weapon to fight North Korea’s growing
nuclear capabilities.
As reported on Yahoo.com by Sofia Lotto Persio onNewsweek,Seoul’s Agency for Defense Development (ADD) has acquired
the technology to build graphite bombs, non-lethal weapons that can take down
North Korea’s power system in case of a war, according to military sources who
spoke to South Korea’s news agency Yonhap on Sunday.
“All technologies for the development of a graphite bomb
led by the ADD have been secured," a military official
said. "It is in the stage where we can build the bombs anytime."
Known as
“blackout bombs,” the warheads can be dropped by a plane over power stations. A
form of cluster bombs, they split into several canister-like “sub-munitions,”
which in turn release carbon graphite filaments that short-circuit the
electricity supplies.
The bombs were first used by the U.S. Navy in
1991 to black out power supply in Iraq during the first Gulf War. They
were later also deployed against Serbia during the Balkan conflict
in 1999.
After their use in Kosovo, NATO
spokesperson Jamie Shea said that the bomb’s impact is mostly
psychological, as the targeted country feels literally and figuratively
powerless. “We can turn the power off whenever we need to and whenever we want
to," Shea told the BBC at the time.
South
Korea is adding the weapons to its arsenal as part of one of its
recently-developed military programs, the so-called “Kill Chain,” which aims to
detect an imminent missile attack from the North and react with a pre-emptive
strike.
As reported by the Korea Times in
2016, the arms build-up also includes the Korea Air and Missile Defense
Program, tasked with tracking and shooting down nuclear missiles heading for
South Korea, and an initiative known as the Korean Massive Punishment and
Retaliation system, which would first strike back against a North Korean
attack.
Originally due for completion in the mid-2020s, South
Korea has sped up the program’s timeline to face North Korea’s rapidly
advancing nuclear weapons development program.
Monitoring groups such as the Nuclear Threat Initiative recorded Pyongyang conducting 19
missile tests this year alone, including two intercontinental ballistic
missiles capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.
North Korea also tested a hydrogen bomb in its sixth—and
most powerful—nuclear test to date.
The South Korean military says there are no signs of an
imminent threat.
"We have yet to detect any signs of immediate
provocations from North Korea," a South Korean military source said on
Monday, quoted in Yonhap,
adding: "We are maintaining an upgraded monitoring effort to guard against
any developments."
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