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South Korean Nuclear Sites Could Be Targeted For Devastating Sabotage

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South korean Nuclear SiteRussian analysts have recently expressed concern about the destruction of South Korean nuclear sites, through either covert sabotage or direct attack.

North Korea is well known for a few military capabilities: missiles, (which the ROK and U.S. say they've got covered with Patriots and Aegis destroyers), artillery, and a 200,000-strong force ofSpecial Purpose operators.

While an all-out artillery barrage might be too aggressive, recent reports have warned of a tactical strike or possibly something "sneaky and creative."

From a piece in RIA Novosti:

Radioactive fallout from South Korean nuclear plants blown up by enemy saboteurs could be, for Russia, the worst consequence of a possible Korean war – should one happen, Russian analysts said.

The four running nuclear plants, which produce roughly a third of South Korea's energy needs, represent such a danger to Russia and China that President Vladimir Putin said their destruction would make “Chernobyl … seem like child’s play.”

The ROK's plants all sit on the coasts, making it an easy-to-reach prospect for North Korean maritime raid forces. Though nuclear security is likely very high, North Korean commandos should not be brushed aside lightly.

They have a vast network of spies, and have been accused of several hundred abductions, to include the high-visibility kidnapping of a South Korean actress and her director husband.

They've also used stealthy means to steal their way into South Korean territory, often for assassinations, and once even to attempt a direct assault on the president.

Still, most analysts say to expect a light skirmish, that North Korea dare not risk elevating tension to an all-out war — if anything, simply out of self-preservation.

“Expecting a war just because of North Korean statements is like expecting rapture in the immediate future just because the Pope gave a sermon about sin in the world,” Andrei Lankov, a Russian expert in Korean studies who teaches at the Kookmin University in Seoul, quipped to RIA Novosti.

SEE ALSO: Rare images show a side of North Korea most people rarely see >

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