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North Korea puts rocket forces on standby

A photo of a North Korean long-range rocket that was recently launched, which has alarmed the Pentagon, is displayed on a picture board in front of the North Korean embassy in Beijing on March 22, 2013. China is willing to promote dialogue between North and South Korea as stability on the Korean peninsula is also in China's best interest, President Xi Jinping told his South Korean counterpart this week. Beijing is North Korea's sole diplomatic and economic ally, but relations have been strained by Pyongyang's bellicose actions and threats to the United States and South Korea. UPI/Stephen Shaver
A photo of a North Korean long-range rocket that was recently launched, which has alarmed the Pentagon, is displayed on a picture board in front of the North Korean embassy in Beijing on March 22, 2013. China is willing to promote dialogue between North and South Korea as stability on the Korean peninsula is also in China's best interest, President Xi Jinping told his South Korean counterpart this week. Beijing is North Korea's sole diplomatic and economic ally, but relations have been strained by Pyongyang's bellicose actions and threats to the United States and South Korea. UPI/Stephen Shaver | License Photo

PYONGYANG, North Korea, March 29 (UPI) -- North Korea's leader Friday ordered military officials on standby to "strike any time" against U.S. and South Korean targets, official media reported.

The Yonhap News Agency quoted the North's Korean Central News Agency as saying the Communist country's leader, Kim Jong Un, "convened an urgent operation meeting on the Korean People's Army's Strategic Rocket Force's performance of duty for firepower strike at the Supreme Command."

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"He finally signed the plan on technical preparations of strategic rockets, ordering them to be on standby to fire so that they may strike any time the U.S. mainland, its military bases in the operational theaters in the Pacific, including Hawaii and Guam, and those in South Korea," KCNA said.

The announcement came a day after two U.S. B-2 Spirit stealth bombers flew non-stop practice missions from their base in Missouri to the Korean Peninsula, a distance of 6,500 miles, and back in a show of U.S. commitment to its Asia-Pacific allies.

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North Korean media quoted Kim as saying the stealth bomber practice mission was a U.S. ultimatum to ignite a nuclear war at any cost and said Kim "declared the revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea, North Korea's official name] would react to the U.S. nuclear blackmail with merciless nuclear attack, and war of aggression with an all-out war of justice."

During a bombing drill over the Korean Peninsula, the U.S. B-2 stealth bombers, with their radar-evading capability, dropped "inert munitions on the Jik [islet] Do Range" and returned "to the continental U.S. in a single, continuous mission," said a statement carried on the website of the U.S. Forces in Korea.

A South Korean official told Yonhap that while the B-2 stealth bombing exercise was a routine part of the current U.S.-South Korean military drills, "we take First Chairman Kim's order as a step to respond to this [exercise]."

The increasingly bellicose rhetoric from Pyongyang "only deepens that nation's isolation," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters aboard Air Force 1 en route to Miami Friday.

Passage of the U.N. Security Council resolution imposing further sanctions on North Korea is "a pretty clear indication that there is a unanimity of opinion across the globe about the need for North Korea to live up to their international obligations," Earnest said.

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The Security Council resolution is also an indication that the United States is working with not just its allies but also Russia and China in seeking a peaceful solution, he said

"So the path to peace for the North Koreans is pretty clear," Earnest said. "They need to end the provocative acts and the bellicose rhetoric. They need to abandon their nuclear program. They need to live up to their international obligations. And upon doing so, they will be welcomed back into the international community."

At the U.S. State Department, spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said, "When a country says the kinds of things that the DPRK is saying, you have to take it seriously and you have to take steps to ensure that when we say in response we can and will defend our own nation and we can and will defend our allies, that that is credible."

Nuland said North Korea is "causing us to have to ensure that our defenses are appropriate and strong both for ourselves and for our allies."

Nuland, quoting President Barack Obama, said North Korea can come out of its isolation if it is willing to meet its international obligations and fulfill its denuclearization and other commitments.

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"But in the meantime, we're going to do what we need to do to defend ourselves and our allies," she said.

Earlier, a U.S. official told CNN North Korea "is not a paper tiger" and it would not be "smart to dismiss its provocative behavior as pure bluster."

Pentagon spokesman George Little told CNN it is important to remain calm because no one "wants there to be war on the Korean Peninsula."

Analysts have said despite the latest threat North Korea is nowhere close to being technologically capable of delivering a nuclear warhead on a missile.

Little told CNN the United States in any case is watching North Korea's missile capabilities.

"The important thing is for us to stay out ahead of what we think the North Korean threat is, especially from their missile program," he said. "They've been testing more missiles, and they've been growing their capabilities and we have to stay out ahead."

The isolated, impoverished Communist country's anger has reached a feverish pitch since the U.N. Security Council tightened its sanctions following its December long-range missile test and its February nuclear test, its third since 2006, observers said.

About 28,500 U.S. forces are based in South Korea.

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