U.S.
Navy | Z.A. Landers | Reuters. The U.S. military's Pacific Command
chief Wednesday took the blame for confusion over the USS Carl Vinson's
location during testimony to a House panel.
The
U.S. military's top Pacific chief was in the hot seat Wednesday at a
House hearing and took the blame for apparent miscommunication over the
USS Carl Vinson carrier's movements amid the rising tensions with North
Korea.
Earlier this month, President Donald Trump
said in an interview the military was sending "an armada" to the Korean
Peninsula and reports at the time indicated the carrier strike group
was led by the Vinson. But as tensions mounted with North Korea over the
nuclear and ballistic-missile threat, it was learned last week from a New York Times story the Vinson was actually headed in another direction and not toward Korean waters.
"With
regard to the Carl Vinson, that's my fault on the confusion and I'll
take the hit for it," Navy Adm. Harry Harris, the four-star commander of
U.S. Pacific Command, testified at a hearing of the House Committee on
Armed Services.
Harris
explained that he made the decision to pull the aircraft carrier out of
Singapore and cancel a port visit to Australia. He also ordered the
carrier to proceed north. However, he said, he failed to communicate
that adequately to the press. "So that is all on me."
The
flap over the Vinson led to charges the Trump administration used the
Vinson as just a "bluff" against Pyongyang. South Korean's Yonhap news agency ran a story with a headline, "Trump's 'armada' gaffe stains his commitment to alliance."
White
House spokesman Sean Spicer was asked last week about the Vinson issue
and insisted there was no intent to mislead. Harris, however, didn't
explain the disconnect with the White House over the matter.
The admiral said the military has since moved the Vinson closer to the region to handle a Korean mission.
"Today
it sits in the Philippine Sea, just east of Okinawa and [within]
striking range and power projection range of North Korea if called upon
to do that," Harris said.
Harris
was pressed on the carrier mess by Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-California), a
member of the House Committee on Armed Services. "When dealing with an
unpredictable regime [like North Korea], empty rhetoric can be
dangerous," the congressman remarked.
Meantime,
Harris also said the USS Michigan, a guided-missile nuclear submarine,
is now in South Korea's Busan port and will be there for a few days and
then will leave port and be operating within the area. "This is a show
of solidarity with our South Korean allies and a flexible deterrent show
of force to North Korea should they consider using force against South
Korea."
From
the other side of the Pacific, the U.S. early Wednesday launched an
operational test of an unarmed intercontinental ballistic missile from
Vandenberg AFB in California. The test also was seen as a demonstration
to North Korea of the U.S. nuclear deterrent capability.
Rodong Sinmun,
the official newspaper of the Pyongyang regime's ruling party,
Wednesday "denounced the U.S. for getting all the more zealous in its
war hysteria against the DPRK." DPRK is short for North Korea's formal
name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
The
U.S. military's Pacific chief testified at the House hearing Wednesday
that North Korea's nuclear program poses a bigger threat than ever but
China, despite offering to help, remains a formidable adversary with
island-building and increased militarization.
"North Korea remains our most immediate threat in the Indo-Asia-Pacific," he said.
Harris
said North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is "on a quest for nuclear weapons
and the ballistic missiles capable of delivering them
intercontinentally. The words and actions of North Korea threaten the
U.S. homeland and that of our allies in South Korea and Japan."
North
Koreans have "an aggressive weapons test schedule, as demonstrated by
yet another ballistic missile launch this April," the admiral said. He
added that the regime launched more ballistic missiles last year than it
did in the previous few years combined.
"Just
as Thomas Edison is believed to have failed 1,000 times before
successfully inventing the electric light bulb, so too, Kim Jong Un will
keep trying," he said. "One of these days soon, he will succeed."
Harris
said the concern isn't just land-based missile technology but submarine
weapons the North Koreans are developing. Moreover, he indicated that
solid-fuel advances by Pyongyang also are troubling.
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