Deception Part of North Korea War Plan
The Russian and British Foreign Ministries and the US State
Department reported that on 5 April the North Korean Foreign Ministry
distributed a diplomatic circular to all resident embassies in Pyongyang
and non-governmental organizations that the North Korean government
would be unable to guarantee the safety of embassies and international
organizations in the event of conflict from 10 April. The North Korean
government asked foreign embassies whether they were considering
evacuating staff.
This week South Korean workers employed in factories in the North
were also told to leave by April 10, according to South Korean press.
British reaction. The British
Foreign Office said it "has no immediate plans to withdraw our embassy
in Pyongyang. We are considering next steps, including a change to our
travel advice."
Earlier, a spokesperson said: "The DPRK (The Democratic People's
Republic of Korea) has responsibilities under the Vienna convention to
protect diplomatic missions, and we believe they have taken this step as
part of their continuing rhetoric that the US poses a threat to them."
Russian reaction. "This
is true; on 5 April a representative of the North Korean Foreign
Ministry suggested that Russia and other diplomatic missions in
Pyongyang consider evacuating their staff from North Korea owing to the
deteriorating situation on the Korean Peninsula. Russia noted this
information and, for the time being, we are considering the issue,"
Denis Samsonov, public relations officer at the Russian embassy, said.
At the same time, Samsonov said that "nothing extraordinary is happening, the embassy is operating normally".
"I can assure you that the situation in Pyongyang is absolutely
calm. Visually, no tension is observed.
Moreover, today is a public
holiday in Pyongyang and nothing extraordinary is in sight," he added.
US reaction. Sweden protects and
represents US interests in Pyongyang. The US State Department
spokesperson said, "We have been in touch with the Swedes, our
protecting power in the DPRK, because obviously if they were to change
their status, we would have to inform American citizens in the DPRK. At
this point, we have no reason to believe that they will make any
changes."
Comment:
The US State Department spokesperson had no information about the number
of US nationals in North Korea. They are either in prison or working
with humanitarian aid organizations.
There has been no comment from the
Chinese, Indian or other non-European embassies about the note. UN
Secretary General Ban reportedly is studying it.
The note is strange because it is not directive, but it allows
only five days for departures. There are not enough scheduled flights
between Pyongyang and Beijing to evacuate the foreign diplomats and
staff in five days.
Expulsion of foreign diplomats is another classic warning
indicator of war. North Korea has evacuated its embassies on multiple
occasions, especially during the buildup to wars in the Middle East.
Thus, North Korean officials know the significance of this action.
The ambiguity in the language of the circular appears
deliberately designed to foster doubt and disbelief. It appears to be
working. An expulsion order, in contrast, would leave no doubt that
North Korea's intention would be to take action that risked general war.
Ignoring the ambiguity and the various reports of normality in Pyongyang and elsewhere, cumulatively,
since February North Korea has made war preparations and tested and
rehearsed its civilian and military war plans. It is on a path that has
prepared the nation for war and indicates its intention is to take
military action that risks general war.
The departures from the process tracked in past crises and the
apparent inconsistency and lack of uniformity in behavior may best be
judged as part of the deception plan. Street scenes in Pyongyang are
normal and planting has begun. They indicate an attack is not imminent.
On the other hand they do not contradict the North's statements
that it intends to settle all accounts. Everyday behavior can change in a
week, now that the leadership has rehearsed the national mobilization
plan and the soldiers are trained. After a stand down to rest and
recover from the final phase of the Winter Training Cycle which ended on
31 March, the Korean People's Army, as a force, will reach its point of
maximum readiness after 10 April.
Deception is a mandatory
part of every North Korean military action and has been used throughout
the past two months. Deception was used during the nuclear test and the
satellite launch. Deception is being used now at Kaesong and elsewhere
to persuade reporters that the North's intentions are more benign than
the North's own statements say they are. Doubt and confusion degrade
vigilance and lengthen response time.
The irony is the North Korean leadership has notified the Allies
of every step in the process; posted the three-day war plan on the
internet; informed the US and South Korea governments that they intend
to attack and announced the date the final attack plan was approved. Now
they are clearing out foreigners.
They are hiding their intentions in plain sight by using media
and visual reports to reinforce biases that this is the same old thing;
that they are bluffing. There are many familiar pieces, but the
cumulative progression is new.
To repeat, cumulatively,
the North Koreans incrementally have executed and tested their national
war preparation plan since February. Uneven implementation appears to be
part of the deception plan and a concession to civilian requirements
when tight discipline is not yet needed.
No source in the public domain has reported that war preparations
have ended or that the leadership has ordered a stand down from full
combat readiness.
NightWatch
judges that North Korea intends to take military actions that will risk
general war, but will be short of the start of general war. However,
North Korea will be prepared for escalation to general war instantly.
Thus far the public statements and other evidence indicate the
military actions are likely to include missile launches against US
bases, such as Guam, and a shooting incident against South Korean
forces, such as those on the islands off the west coast. The North
Koreans told the embassies that this can occur any time after 10 April.
The Allies must assume they mean it.
Two missiles. Today South
Korean authorities told the press that two long range ballistic missiles
arrived by train at the east coast site. They were loaded onto mobile
transporter-launch vehicles and have been driven to hidden launch
facilities. The report appears to be a re-evaluation of earlier
information. The total thus far is two missiles
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