Updated February 2017
With North Korea making the world's headlines on a fairly regular basis and their announcements of a successful hydrogen bomb test and the successful launching of several ballistic missiles, in researching the nation, I stumbled on an interesting bit of recent history - OPPLAN 5027, the United States - Republic of Korea Combined Forces Command warplane.
With North Korea making the world's headlines on a fairly regular basis and their announcements of a successful hydrogen bomb test and the successful launching of several ballistic missiles, in researching the nation, I stumbled on an interesting bit of recent history - OPPLAN 5027, the United States - Republic of Korea Combined Forces Command warplane.
The original
OPPLAN 5027, was designed to oppose a North Korean invasion. A 50 mile
retreat from the demilitarized zone (DMZ) would bring allied forces to the
Hollingsworth line south of the Han River where it bisects the capital of South
Korea. Troops would wait here until they were reinforced and then push
forward, pushing North Korean forces back to the north.
In 1973 -
1974, United States General James Hollingsworth developed a new version of
OPPLAN 5027, known as OPPLAN 5027 -74, that would see the movement of allied
tanks, infantry and artillery toward the Military Control Zone (MCZ) located
five miles south of the DMZ as shown on this map:
It was hoped
that this tactic would convince the North Koreans that an invasion was futile
since a rapid deployment of both ground troops and bomber sorties into DPRK
territory was likely and that capturing the capital city, Pyongyang, was quite
possible. General Hollingsworth predicted that this lightning invasion
would defeat North Korea in a few days with his nine day war plan. At the
time, the Congressional Budget Office predicted that, without the use of
nuclear weapons, if the North looked set to defeat the allied forces, Seoul
could fall into North Korean hands.
Throughout
the period from 1991 to 1994, the United States had repeatedly
tried to coerce and force North Korea into halting its nuclear program which,
at the time, saw North Korea removing spent fuel rods containing plutonium from
its nuclear reactor at Yongbyon and the country's withdrawal from
the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. On June 16th, 1994, after not being
able to determine whether the DPRK had sufficient plutonium to create one or
two nuclear weapons, President Bill Clinton dispatched military reinforcements
to South Korea.
OPPLAN 5027
under went further fine-tuning in 1994 and in this scenario, South Korean
forces were able to reach a stalemate with DPRK forces at a point 20 to 30
miles south of the DMZ. At that point, a combination of U.S. and ROK
forces would state a major air campaign against northern forces. A
division of Marines along with divisions of ROK forces would launch an overland
offensive from the east coast of North Korea followed by an advance on the west
coast toward Pyongyang accompanied by a major counteroffensive from a staging
area north of Seoul. This plan included counteroffensive measures that
would have seen the toppling of the North Korean's Eternal President, Kim Il
Sung).
OPPLAN 5027
was further overhauled throughout the 1990s, ensuring the availability of
Japanese bases should American forces need them in the event of an invasion of
North Korea. OPPLAN 5027 -98, adopted in 1998, focussed on offensive
operations into the DPRK with the goal of "abolishing North Korea as a
functioning state, ending the rule of its leader Kim Jong Il and reorganizing
the country under South Korean control.". The plan also concentrated
on North Korea's chemical and biological weapons capabilities which, it was
estimated, could kill up to 38 percent of Seoul's 12 million residents.
In 1992, South Korea released information that North Korea had 1000 tonnes of chemical weapons held in six
storage facilities, a 400 percent increase over five years earlier. More
recent reports from South Korea estimates the size of the DPRK's stockpile of
chemical weapons at between 2500 and 5000 tonnes, among these, blistering
agents, nerve agents, choking agents, blood agents and tear gas. OPPLAN
5027-98 included pre-emptive strikes against North Korean military bases
throughout the country if intelligence detected that the North was preparing to
strike at South Korea.
In OPPLAN
5027-00, the plan upped the ante. In the early 1990s, the U.S. planned to
deploy 480,000 troops in the event of hostilities. By the year 2000, this
number had risen to a whopping 690,000 troops from the Army, Air Force, Navy
and Marine Corps, 160 Navy ships and 1600 aircraft, all deployed from the
United States within a 90 day period. Carrier battle groups with advanced
fighters, tactical fighter wings and marine expeditionary forces from both
Okinawa and the U.S. mainland would be dispatched to the Korean theatre.
By 2004,
OPPLAN 5027-04 had been altered to allow the United States to respond to North
Korean hostilities without waiting for as many ground troops to arrive by using
air power rather than artillery and by using missile defense systems including
anti-missile interceptors.
A war on the
Korean peninsula would be devastating. Seoul, with a population of
10.4 million people, contains one quarter of South Korea's entire population
and is located about 30 miles south of the DMZ. North Korea, while it may
appear culturally and economically backward, has a substantial military with
between 1 million and 1.2 million citizens in its Korean People's Army, ranked
number four in the world by size. It also has an estimated 8.2 million
reserve personnel putting the nation at number one by size. Ground forces
have access to 3800 tanks, 2270 APCs and 11200 pieces of
artillery, most of which are self-propelled for rapid deployment. The Air
Force has a total of 103000 personnel, operating 1670 aircraft, most of which
are obsolete. If South Korean intelligence is right, North Korea has a collection of missiles capable of delivering a deadly cargo as shown here:
Here is a chart showing a comparison of troop and equipment strength for both North and South Korea:
As was the
case in the 1950s version of the Korean War, China's close relationship with
their North Korean counterparts is a complicating issue. China's intervention in North Korea changed the entire complexion of the first Korean
war just as it is likely to change the outcome of the next. After all, the People's Republic of China maintains the world's largest military force based on manpower with an estimated 2.3 million troops in the People's Liberation Army. That, once again, is a game changer.
I spent two tours in S.Korea and did some months in N. Korea during the war and have kept up on both elements of the peninsula since then. There is no "winning" a war there. Any invasion in either direction - any serious attack seen as the prelude to an invasion - would immediately escalate in nuclear war: two scorpions stinging each other to death. China would not let the US prevail by over coming N. Korea and would intervene should there be any sign of a US "victory". If I were opposed to the US and if I were Chinese,in the event of a Korean War II I would take Taiwan immediately. If I were Iranian, this event would lead to an attack on Israel. Blame for the situation today goes to N. Korea and to the evident lack of leadership and weakness in the US. China may not like having a spoiled child in Korea, but it will always back the regime there to prevent Japanese or US incursion in an area critical to their defense. I suspect Russia, in the event of a war involving Korea, China and the USA would sit back and enjoy the view. A resolution to the current problem has to involve Kim setting down and putting on big-boy panties. Whether he is willing to do this or not is a question. I believe this coming week will see further N. Korean provocations, but how far they will go I can not tell. A slight slip up by any side could provoke total war.
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