S.Korea, US, Japan hold missile defence drills to counter N.Korea
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[April 17, 2023]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea, the United States and Japan staged joint
naval missile defence exercises on Monday in a push to improve security
co-operation and respond better to North Korea's evolving missile
threats, Seoul's navy said.
The three nations agreed at talks in Washington on Friday to hold
regular missile defence and anti-submarine exercises in their efforts to
boost diplomatic and military co-operation.
North Korea tested a new solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile
on Friday that experts say would ease the way for missile launches with
little warning, part of an increase in its military activities in recent
weeks.
Monday's drills in international waters between Korea and Japan bring
together South Korea's 7,600-tonne Aegis destroyer Yulgok Yi I, the U.S.
guided-missile destroyer Benfold, and Japan's Atago destroyer, also
equipped with Aegis radar systems.
The effort focuses on mastering response procedures, from detection and
tracking to information sharing, by creating a virtual target in a
scenario featuring a North Korean ballistic missile provocation, the
South's navy said.
"It is an opportunity to strengthen trilateral security cooperation
against North Korea's escalating nuclear and missile threats," Captain
Kim Ki-young of the South Korean destroyer said in a statement.
This would solidify the navy's capability and posture to respond to
ballistic missiles, he added.
Japan's defence ministry said the exercises promote trilateral
cooperation over regional security challenges, and demonstrate the three
countries' strong commitment to secure a free and open international
order based on the rule of law.
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A view of a test launch of a new
solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) Hwasong-18 at
an undisclosed location in this still image of a photo used in a
video released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA)
April 14, 2023. KCNA via REUTERS
Pyongyang has threatened "more practical and offensive" action as
South Korea and U.S. forces have performed annual springtime
exercises since March, some involving Japan, which the North has
described as a rehearsal for nuclear war.
Separately, the air forces of South Korea and the United States are
set to begin drills on Monday for a 12-day run.
Also on Monday, South Korea and Japan resumed "two-plus-two" talks
of senior diplomatic and security officials in Seoul after a
five-year halt, as ties thaw after a years-long feud over issues of
wartime history.
They shared views on North Korea and regional issues, while agreeing
to improve understanding of each other's policies and foster
security co-operation in a "forward-looking" way, Seoul's foreign
and defence ministries said in a joint statement after the meeting.
President Yoon Suk Yeol, who has pledged to move ties with Japan
beyond the past, visited Tokyo in March for the first time in 12
years as South Korea's leader.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Additional reporting by Elaine Lies in
Tokyo; Editing by Lincoln Feast, Clarence Fernandez and Philippa
Fletcher)
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