US B-1B bomber in attack drill show of force to North Korea

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A US Air Force B-1B Lancer assigned to the 37th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron, takes off to fly a bilateral mission with Japanese and South Korea Air Force jets in the vicinity of the Sea of Japan, from Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, 10 October 2017Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

US bomber planes flew with Japanese and South Korean jets in a joint exercise in October

The US military has flown a B-1B bomber over South Korea as part of a massive joint aerial drill, in a move seen as a warning to the North.

The B-1B Lancer plane simulated bombing a military field.

The drill is taking place a week after Pyongyang fired what it claimed was a new intercontinental ballistic missile which could hit mainland US.

The US has previously deployed bombers as a show of force after North Korean missile or nuclear tests.

South Korea's military said the US bomber took part in the simulation with US and South Korean fighter jets.

It took place at the Pilsung range in north-eastern Gangwon province, about 150km (93 miles) from the border with North Korea, reported Yonhap news agency citing the military.

More than 200 planes and thousands of troops are involved in the Vigilant Ace aerial exercise, which ends on Friday and had been planned before North Korea's latest missile launch.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

US F-16s and F-35As have also been deployed as part of the exercise

Pyongyang, which routinely condemns US-South Korea's joint military exercises as rehearsals for war, called the latest drill "nuclear war provocation moves" in state media on Monday.

The drill is taking place as the UN's political chief Jeffrey Feltman visits Pyongyang for dialogue, in a rare visit by a senior UN official.

Tensions have been running high since the missile launch late last month, which triggered international condemnation and a warning from the US that the North Korean regime would be "utterly destroyed" if war broke out.

South Korea's military also plans to launch a combat unit of weaponised drones called "dronebots" next year, Yonhap reported, external quoting an unnamed official.

The "dronebots" would conduct reconnaissance on core North Korean targets such as nuclear and missile sites, and could also launch attacks, though the report did not give further details on how this could be done.