S.Korea, U.S., Japan stage anti-submarine drills amid N.Korea tension
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[September 30, 2022]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) -The navies of South Korea,
the United States and Japan staged trilateral anti-submarine exercises
for the first time in five years on Friday, amid tension over North
Korea's series of missile tests.
The drills were held in international waters off the Korean peninsula's
east coast, just a day after North Korea fired two ballistic missiles
into the sea off its east coast and U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris
visited Seoul and the heavily fortified border between the two Koreas.
Thursday's test was the third such launch in five days by the North,
which has fired an unprecedented number of missiles this year.
"The exercises are designed to improve their capability to respond to
increasing North Korean submarine threats, including its
submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBM) at a time when it
consistently poses nuclear and missile threats with a series of
ballistic missile tests," the South Korean navy said in a statement.
The U.S. navy said the drills will enhance inter-operability and
tactical and technical coordination between the three countries.
The U.S. and Japanese navies also said the exercises are expected to
promote "a free and open Indo-Pacific," amid tension over China's
actions in the Taiwan Strait.
The anti-submarine drills have not been conducted since 2017 because the
former progressive South Korean government sought to improve
inter-Korean relations and facilitate denuclearsation talks between
Pyongyang and Washington, which have stalled since 2019.
South Korea's new President Yoon Suk-yeol, who took office in May, has
vowed to boost trilateral security cooperation with the United States
and Japan to better counter the North's evolving weapons threats.
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Japanese, South Korean and U.S. Naval
Vessels take part in joint anti-submarine exercises off South
Korea's coast, in this handout photo provided by South Korean Navy
and relased by Yonhap on September 30, 2022. South Korean Navy/Yonhap
via REUTERS
The exercises brought together the USS Ronald Reagan aircraft
carrier, the 9,800-ton guided missile cruiser USS Chancellorsville,
the 6,900-ton Aegis-equipped destroyer USS Barry, South Korea's
4,400-ton destroyer Munmu the Great and Japan's 5,100-ton tanker
Asahi, among other warships, the three navies said.
The drills came days after a U.S.-based think tank said North Korea
may be preparing to launch a new submarine believed to be capable of
firing ballistic missiles, citing commercial satellite imagery.
South Korea's military has also detected signs that the isolated
country might be gearing up for an SLBM test, Yonhap news agency
reported on Saturday. A military spokesman declined to confirm the
report but said it is closely monitoring the North's submarine bases
and activities.
South Korea and its allies are also concerned that the North is
about to conduct a nuclear test – which would be the seventh since
2006 and its first since 2017.
South Korean lawmakers briefed by the country's spy agency said on
Wednesday the North has completed preparations for a nuclear test
and a possible window for carrying it out could come between Oct. 16
and Nov. 7.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Jamie Freed and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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