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By the way, on the contrary, the United States showed off its power today (4th). North Korea launched a fairly reluctant B-52 bomber towards Japan, but the unusual thing is that it is usually sent from Guam or Alaska bases, but today it was sent directly from the mainland.

Reporter Tae-Hoon Kim, a defense expert, will also unravel this.

<Reporter>

Today, a track trained by the U.S. Air Force strategic bomber B-52 in Misawa, north of Honshu, Japan, was captured on a civil aviation tracking site.

The location of the B-52 took off from Louisiana's Boxdale Air Force Base. It flew 10,000 km from the American mainland.

The B-52 normally trained in Northeast Asia after rushing from Guam with a 3-hour flight or Alaska with a 6-hour flight, but it is difficult to find examples of training that flew over 10 hours from the mainland like today.

Currently, B-1B bombers are deployed in Guam, and B-52 bombers are deployed in Alaska. Recently, they trained Northeast Asia several times.

[Sinjongwoo / Korea Defense and Security Forum responsible analyst. (Guam, Alaska, etc.) to scramble (the bomber) in Few Snow on the US mainland as a circulation arrangement seems that the bombing training to further pressure on the partners]

In addition, US military aircraft carrier Three ships were deployed between Japan and the Philippines, and Japan and Guam are conducting drills for the infiltration of special operations forces every day.

While minimizing power transfer to the Corona 19, revealing tracks, flying bombers on the mainland and conducting large-scale airlift exercises seem to be both training and pressure targeting both North Korea, China and Russia at the same time.

(Video Editing: Jeon Min-kyu, CG: Ryu Sang-soo)