Publication

Oct 2010

Tensions ran perilously high on the Korean peninsula in the months after the sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan on March 26, 2010, which claimed the lives of forty-six sailors. An international investigation subsequently attributed the incident to a North Korean torpedo attack, prompting both South Korea and the United States to impose new punitive measures on the regime in Pyongyang and to conduct a series of high-profile naval exercises to deter further provocations. These actions elicited an especially vituperative response from North Korea, including the threat to unleash a “retaliatory sacred war.”

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Author Paul B Stares
Series CFR Contingency Planning Memoranda
Issue 10
Publisher Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Copyright © 2010 Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
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