South Korea to deploy ‘StarWars’ lasers against North’s drones

South Korea to deploy ‘StarWars’ lasers against North’s drones
Above, attack drones on display during a military parade to mark the 70th anniversary of the armistice that halted fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, on Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang, North Korea on July 27, 2023. (KCNA/KNS via AP)
Short Url
Updated 12 July 2024
Follow

South Korea to deploy ‘StarWars’ lasers against North’s drones

South Korea to deploy ‘StarWars’ lasers against North’s drones
  • The new laser weapons are invisible and noise-free, require no additional ammunition
  • The two Koreas remain technically at war because the 1950-53 conflict ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty

SEOUL: South Korea will begin deploying drone-melting laser weapons designed to shoot down North Korean UAVs this year, the country’s arms procurement agency said Friday.
The new laser weapons — dubbed the “StarWars Project” by the South — are invisible and noise-free, require no additional ammunition, operate solely on electricity and cost only about 2,000 won ($1.45) per shot, according to the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA).
The “Block-I” system, developed by Hanwha Aerospace, will be “put into operational deployment in the military this year,” Lee Sang-yoon, a DAPA official, said.
The two Koreas remain technically at war because the 1950-53 conflict ended in an armistice, not a peace treaty.
In December 2022, Seoul said five North Korean drones crossed into the South, the first such incident in five years, prompting its military to fire warning shots and deploy fighter jets, but they failed to shoot any of them down.
The South’s “ability to respond to North Korea’s drone provocations will be significantly enhanced” by the laser weapons system, DAPA said in a statement Thursday.
It has successfully achieved a 100 percent shoot-down rate in previous tests, and with future improvements, it could become a “game-changing” weapons system capable of countering aircraft and ballistic missiles in the future, DAPA said.
The “StarWars” system — a “weapon of the future” according to official Lee — neutralizes targets by directly hitting them with laser light generated from optical fiber.
“When a laser weapon transfers heat to a drone, its surface melts. As the surface melts, the internal components catch fire, causing the drone to eventually fall,” Lee said.
“This laser weapon uses electricity, so simply increasing the output allows it to travel at the speed of light,” he said.
“Laser weapons can travel even further in space where there is no air,” which gives it a significant advantage over conventional weapons, he added.
But some analysts said it was too early to be sure about the weapon’s capabilities.
“Laser weapons have not yet been put to practical use worldwide, and further verification and more time are needed to determine whether they can be utilized as a practical weapon system,” Hong Sung-pyo, senior researcher at the Korea Institute for Military Affairs, said.
“Laser weapons also have an operational range. While it may be possible to shoot down (North Korean) drones that come within this range, it is difficult to target those that are outside of it,” he added.
Relations between the two Koreas are at one of their lowest points in years, with Pyongyang ramping up weapons testing as it draws ever closer to Russia.
After Pyongyang sent multiple barrages of trash-carrying balloons across the border, Seoul last month fully suspended a tension-reducing military deal and resumed live-fire drills on border islands and by the demilitarised zone that divides the Korean peninsula.


US Secret Service chief says local police warned of gunman at Trump shooting

US Secret Service chief says local police warned of gunman at Trump shooting
Updated 02 August 2024
Follow

US Secret Service chief says local police warned of gunman at Trump shooting

US Secret Service chief says local police warned of gunman at Trump shooting

WASHINGTON: The US Secret Service’s acting director said on Friday that local police in Pennsylvania warned that there was a man with a gun on a roof before the July 13 attempted assassination of Donald Trump, but the message did not reach its agents on time.
Local authorities and Secret Service agents were using different communications channels, which prevented the warning from getting through before a 20-year-old assailant opened fire on the Republican presidential candidate, Secret Service Acting Director Ronald Rowe told reporters.
“In the final 30 seconds — which has been the focus of what happened before the assailant opened fire — there (were) clearly radio transmissions that may have happened on that local radio net that we did not have,” Rowe said.
Rowe said the FBI, the agency leading a criminal investigation into the shooting, is working to determine exactly what was communicated. But Rowe said investigators believe “there was somebody who did in fact radio out that they had seen the individual with a weapon.”
A local police officer confronted the shooter on the roof of the industrial building where he ultimately opened fire. But the officer, who had been hoisted up by a colleague, fell to the ground about 30 seconds before the assailant began shooting, law enforcement officials previously have said.
At the time shots rang out, the Secret Service were aware local police were dealing with an issue on the periphery of the event, but did not know about a weapon, Rowe said.
In testimony to Congress on Tuesday, Rowe had blamed the failure on local law enforcement while also saying he was “ashamed” of the security lapse that occurred on the day of the shooting. Rowe also noted that the Secret Service had not been present in a command post set up by local law enforcement in Butler, Pennsylvania for the outdoor campaign rally by the former president.
The first shooting of a US president or major party presidential candidate in more than four decades was a glaring security lapse that led last week to former Secret Service Director Kimberly Cheatle’s resignation under bipartisan congressional pressure.
Officials have said that Thomas Crooks, 20, fired the shots that wounded Trump’s right ear, killed one rally attendee and wounded two others with an AR-15-style rifle, before law enforcement snipers shot and killed him.


Van driver arrested after crashing into gates outside Irish prime minister’s office in Dublin

Van driver arrested after crashing into gates outside Irish prime minister’s office in Dublin
Updated 02 August 2024
Follow

Van driver arrested after crashing into gates outside Irish prime minister’s office in Dublin

Van driver arrested after crashing into gates outside Irish prime minister’s office in Dublin
  • Detectives questioning the suspect had ruled out terrorism as a motive
  • The series of incidents occurred around 2 a.m., when government offices were closed, and no injuries were reported

LONDON: A driver was arrested early Friday morning in Dublin after crashing his van into gates outside the home of Ireland’s president, the offices of the prime minister and the building housing parliament, police said.
Detectives questioning the suspect had ruled out terrorism as a motive.
The series of incidents occurred around 2 a.m., when government offices were closed, and no injuries were reported.
The van first rammed the fence outside the official residence of President Michael Higgins, but did not enter the grounds. The driver then traveled about 3 miles (5 kilometers) to central Dublin, where the van plowed into several gates outside two government building complexes.
Pickets in the sturdy iron fence outside the offices of Prime Minister Simon Harris were bent inward and the gate was knocked off its hinges outside the attorney general’s office.
Louise O’Reilly, a member of parliament for the Sinn Féin party, said she and other lawmakers will ask police, known as gardaí, how the incidents could have occurred.
“It’s hard to understand how someone was able to carry out these attacks in several locations in this manner,” O’Reilly told national broadcaster RTE. “We will be looking to the gardaí to provide us with information as to how this could have unfolded and how someone was able to travel to three separate locations in Dublin city before being apprehended.”
The driver, who is in his 40s, was arrested at the scene on suspicion of driving offenses. The white van he was driving was towed from the scene.


Russian troops inch forward in Ukraine’s east with waves of bombs and infantry

Russian troops inch forward in Ukraine’s east with waves of bombs and infantry
Updated 02 August 2024
Follow

Russian troops inch forward in Ukraine’s east with waves of bombs and infantry

Russian troops inch forward in Ukraine’s east with waves of bombs and infantry
  • The push is fueling a surge in civilians fleeing, with requests for evacuation in the area increasing about tenfold over the past two weeks
  • Russian forces have been steadily inching forward on several fronts in the eastern Donetsk region, staging particularly fierce attacks near Pokrovsk

KYIV: Russian assaults are raising pressure on the strategic eastern logistics hub of Pokrovsk, Ukraine said on Friday, as waves of guided bombs and infantry lead to some of Moscow’s largest territorial gains since the spring.
The push is fueling a surge in civilians fleeing, with requests for evacuation in the area increasing about tenfold over the past two weeks, according to a volunteer helping people leave.
Russian forces have been steadily inching forward on several fronts in the eastern Donetsk region, staging particularly fierce attacks near Pokrovsk with Kyiv’s troops stretched thin 29 months since Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Russia’s gains of around 57 square km (22 square miles) in the space of a week are the third largest recorded since April after they made only modest gains in June, Pasi Paroinen, an analyst with the Black Bird Group, told Reuters.
Russian forces are using warplanes and artillery fire to support waves of infantry assaults in the area near Pokrovsk, Ruslan Muzychuk, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s National Guard said in televised remarks.
“These assaults are not always supported by armored vehicles, often it is infantry assaults,” he said, flagging the bombing by Russian warplanes as a particular problem.
“It’s a significant threat ... because the Pokrovsk and Toretsk fronts are taking a large share of the daily aviation strikes carried out on the positions of Ukrainian defenders.”
Russia’s Ministry of Defense said its forces had captured five settlements in the Donetsk region in the past week.
Russia’s use of warplanes to fire guided bombs was crucial for Moscow’s battlefield tactics, said Valeriy Romanenko, a Kyiv-based aviation expert, who compared it to a “conveyor belt.”
“The Russians are not piercing our defense, they are pushing it back. They are advancing 100, 150, 200 meters every day using this tactic: dropping guided bombs, then a ‘meat assault’, (and if those are) repelled, dropping guided bombs again, a ‘meat assault’ again.”
He said the supply of US F-16 fighters to Ukraine could disrupt that dynamic if the jets were able to threaten Russian warplanes, but that such operations were unlikely for now given the risk it would present for the new pilots operating expensive jets.
Paroinen said the Russian offensives around the settlements of Toretsk and Niu York as well as the one to the east of Pokrovsk around the villages of Ocheretyne and Prohres had created a “double crisis” for Ukraine toward the end of June.
That, he said, followed the Russian offensive into the northeastern Kharkiv region, which was halted by Ukraine, but opened a new front and spread the defenders extremely thin.

’THEY ARE DESTROYING EVERYTHING’
Roman Buhayov, an evacuation driver from humanitarian organization East SOS, told Reuters that the number of requests for evacuation in the area had increased about tenfold over the past two weeks.
On Friday, he drove a bus evacuating residents from Novohrodivka, a town with a pre-war population of some 14,000 near Pokrovsk. It now lies around 10 km from the front line, which inches closer each day.
Antonina Kalashnikova, 62, and her disabled son Denys, 34, evacuated their pummelled home by taking Buhayov’s bus to Pokrovsk where she spoke to Reuters.
Together with their neighbor, they arrived to the town with all of their possessions reduced to a few market bags before continuing their journey to the southern city of Mykolaiv.
“They started bombing heavily and it became extremely frightening. We didn’t sleep all night, and we decided to leave,” Kalashnikova said. “They are destroying everything.”


Drug trafficker hanged in Singapore: narcotics bureau

Drug trafficker hanged in Singapore: narcotics bureau
Updated 02 August 2024
Follow

Drug trafficker hanged in Singapore: narcotics bureau

Drug trafficker hanged in Singapore: narcotics bureau
  • The 45-year-old Singaporean man was executed at Changi prison for trafficking 36.93 grams
  • “He was accorded full due process under the law, and was represented by legal counsel throughout the process,” CNB said in a statement

SINGAPORE: Singapore on Friday hanged a convicted drug trafficker, authorities said, in the city-state’s second execution this year.
The 45-year-old Singaporean man was executed at Changi prison for trafficking 36.93 grams (1.3 ounces) of pure heroin, more than twice the 15 grams that merits the death penalty in the strict city-state, the Central Narcotics Bureau (CNB) said.
Rights groups declined to give details about the convict’s identity and his case as the family has requested privacy.
“He was accorded full due process under the law, and was represented by legal counsel throughout the process,” CNB said in a statement late Friday.
The man was convicted and sentenced to death in February 2019, and his legal appeals and petition for clemency have been dismissed, CNB added.
In February, a 35-year-old Bangladeshi man, Ahmed Salim, was sent to the gallows for the murder of his former fiancee in Singapore.
Friday’s execution brings the number of people hanged since Singapore resumed executions in March 2022 to 18, according to an AFP tally.
It had previously halted hangings for a two-year period during the Covid-19 pandemic.
The United Nations, rights groups and other opponents of capital punishment say it has no proven deterrent effect and have called for it to be discontinued.
Singaporean officials insist it has helped make the country one of Asia’s safest.


Power cuts will force more people to leave Ukraine: central bank

Power cuts will force more people to leave Ukraine: central bank
Updated 02 August 2024
Follow

Power cuts will force more people to leave Ukraine: central bank

Power cuts will force more people to leave Ukraine: central bank
  • The worsening of the energy situation and slow normalization of the economic conditions will lead to a larger outflow of migrants abroad in 2024 and 2025
  • The higher emigration is due to “significant destruction of the Ukrainian energy system,” the central bank saidBLA

KYIV: Ukraine’s central bank has predicted emigration levels this year will be far higher than previously forecast, largely due to power cuts caused by Russian attacks on energy facilities.
“The worsening of the energy situation and slow normalization of the economic conditions will lead to a larger outflow of migrants abroad in 2024 and 2025 than previously expected,” the National Bank of Ukraine said in a report released Thursday.
It predicted there would be a net outflow of 400,000 people this year, while the outflow in 2024 would be 300,000 people.
In April, the central bank had forecast that a net 200,000 Ukrainians would leave this year but a net 400,000 would return from abroad next year.
The higher emigration is due to “significant destruction of the Ukrainian energy system, which is accompanied by long power outages and increased risks for the (winter) heating season,” the central bank said.
Beyond the inability to heat homes, power cuts reduce economic activity and demand for workers, further stimulating migration, it said.
The economy has also been hit by millions of young men leaving the country, some doing so illegally to avoid mobilization, although their exact numbers are hard to quantify.
The bank now predicts that there will be a net return of 400,000 in 2026 but the process will be “gradual” as Ukrainians get more accustomed to living abroad while conditions at home will be harder than previously anticipated.
The report cites UN figures from July this year that there are now 6.6 million Ukrainians living abroad, up almost 240,000 since the start of the year.
The total population of Ukraine is the subject of debate since the last census was in 2001 — giving a figure of over 48 million.
There has since been a low birth rate and high death rate and the country has lost swathes of territory to Russian annexation and occupation since 2014.
Estimates for the population as of 2023 vary from 28 million to 34 million, down from 41 million before the war began.