Hai....International news.....
US bomber flies over S. Korea as show of force against North

The test on Wednesday of
what the North claimed was its first hydrogen bomb has sparked international
alarm and raised tensions along the inter-Korean frontier, with Seoul reviving
cross-border propaganda broadcasts.
Sunday's overflight saw
a B52 Stratofortress, which is capable of carrying nuclear weapons, briefly
roar over the Osan Air Base, some 70 kilometres (45 miles) south of the
inter-Korean border, the US military and an eye-witness said.
It was escorted by a
South Korean and an American jet.
The B52 conducted a
low-level flight before heading back to Andersen Air Base in Guam, where it is
stationed.
The mission was
conducted "in response to recent provocative action by North Korea",
US Forces Korea said in a statement.
The aircraft are known
to have taken part in joint annual US-South Korea military exercises that have
enraged Pyongyang, but their flights over South Korea are rarely publicised.
The last time such a
flight was made public was in 2013, after North Korea carried out its third
nuclear test.
At that time, the US
dispatched both a B52 and the more sophisticated B2 stealth bomber to South
Korea in a show of military muscle against the North.
On Sunday, Pyongyang
state media called for the establishment of a peace accord to stabilise the
Korean Peninsula and described the nation's nuclear arsenal as a
"treasured sword" that defends the country's sovereignty.
The two Koreas remain in
a technical state of war because the 1950-53 war ended with an armistice, not a
peace treaty.

Wednesday's nuclear test
was Pyongyang's fourth, though experts have questioned North Korea's claim of
the explosion having been triggered by a hydrogen bomb.
On Friday, the North's
state broadcaster also released video footage of a submarine-launched ballistic
missile test, though South Korean media have suggested the footage was an
edited compilation of a previous test.
- 'Ironclad' commitment
-
Lieutenant General
Terrence J. O'Shaughnessy, commander of the US 7th Air Force and Deputy
Commander of the US Forces Korea, said on Sunday that the United States
maintained an "ironclad" commitment to the defence of South Korea.
This commitment includes
"extended deterrence provided by our conventional forces and our nuclear
umbrella", he said in a statement.
"B52 missions
reinforce the US commitment to the security of our allies and partners, and
demonstrate one of the many alliance capabilities available for the
defence" of South Korea, he said.
"As demonstrated by
today's mission, the combined US and Republic of Korea air forces work and
train together closely every day, and we are totally prepared to meet any
threat to our alliance."

Key Resolve/Foal Eagle,
one of the annual joint exercises, is expected to take place in March.
South Korea hosts 28,000
US troops as the two Koreas technically remain at war because the Korean War of
1950-53 ended in an armistice instead of a peace treaty.
Sunday's show of force
came as Kim Jong-Un claimed the nuclear test was carried out in self-defence,
to prevent a nuclear war with the United States.
In his first public
remarks since the explosion, Kim said the test was "a self-defensive step
for reliably defending the peace on the Korean Peninsula and the regional
security from the danger of nuclear war caused by the US-led
imperialists".
"It is the
legitimate right of a sovereign state and a fair action that nobody can
criticise," he added, according to the official Korean Central News Agency
(KCNA).
The North regularly
accuses the US and its ally South Korea of warmongering.
An official commentary
published by KCNA late Friday also cited toppled leaders Saddam Hussein of Iraq
and Moamer Kadhafi of Libya as examples of what happens when countries forsake
their nuclear ambitions.
The nuclear test has angered world powers, including the
North's key ally China, and the UN Security Council has said it will roll out
new measures to punish the maverick state.
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