U.S. and South Korean wartime operational plans, including a plan to wipe out the North Korean leadership, were stolen by North Korean hackers last year, a South Korean ruling party lawmaker said on Wednesday.
Some 235 gigabytes
of military documents were taken from South Korea’s Defense Integrated Data
Center in September last year, Democratic Party representative Rhee Cheol-hee
said in radio appearances on Wednesday, citing information from unidentified
South Korean defense officials.
In May, an
investigative team inside the defense ministry announced the hack had been
carried out by North Korea, but did not disclose what kind of information had
been taken. The disclosure came as the
U.S. military flew two strategic bombers over the Korean peninsula in a show of
force late on Tuesday, just as President Donald Trump met top defense officials
to discuss how to respond to any threat from North Korea.
Tensions have
soared between the United States and North Korea following a series of weapons
tests by Pyongyang and a string of increasingly bellicose exchanges between
Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
North Korea has launched two missiles over Japan and conducted its sixth
nuclear test in recent weeks as it fast advances toward its goal of developing
a nuclear-tipped missile capable of hitting the U.S. mainland.
The two U.S. Air
Force B-1B bombers were joined by two F-15K fighters from the South Korean
military after leaving their base in Guam, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff
said in a statement on Wednesday. After
entering South Korean airspace, the two bombers carried out air-to-ground
missile drills in waters off the east coast of South Korea, then flew over the
South to waters between it and China to repeat the drill, the release said.
The U.S. military
said in a separate statement it conducted drills with Japanese fighters after
the exercise with South Korea, making it the first time U.S. bombers have
conducted training with fighters from both Japan and South Korea at night. The
U.S. bombers had taken off from the Andersen Air Force Base in Guam. In August,
Pyongyang threatened to fire intermediate-range missiles toward the vicinity of
Guam, a U.S. Pacific territory that is frequently subjected to sabre-rattling
from the North.
Source- NAN
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