S. Korea to strike Pyongyang if N. Korea attacks Seoul
Korea's policy has changed to a policy of an unlimited retaliation and the invasion of North to overthrow Kim family's tyranny in recent years, so it's the ROK threatening to invade North Korea nowadays.
S. Korea to strike Pyongyang if N. Korea attacks Seoul
South Korea will attack Pyongyang, the capital of North Korea, in retaliation if the communist country strikes Seoul, the capital of the South, an official said Monday.
South Korea has set up the principle of tit-for-tat retaliation in dealing with North Korea's possible aggression against Seoul and its adjacent areas, the senior military official said in a recent meeting with reporters.
South Korea "will immediately retaliate" against North Korea "in self-defense in the event of a North Korean provocation," the official said, without elaborating on North Korean targets.
The South has surface-to-surface guided missiles and cruise missiles capable of striking key North Korean facilities, including its nuclear and missile bases, according to defense officials.
Korea's policy has changed to a policy of an unlimited retaliation and the invasion of North to overthrow Kim family's tyranny in recent years, so it's the ROK threatening to invade North Korea nowadays.