South Korean capital drills to guard against surprise attack by North
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[December 27, 2023]
By Daewoung Kim and Jimin Jung
SEOUL (Reuters) - More than 1,000 South Korean military, police and
emergency personnel joined rare defense drills on Wednesday that
simulated an attack by North Korea on Seoul, to counter fears the city
is in striking distance of Pyongyang's weapons and covert attack.
The exercise comes amid heightened tension after the North tested an
intercontinental ballistic missile and launched its first military spy
satellite, with the neighbors reinstating last month some military
measures eased after a 2018 pact.
"There was a big lesson for us when Israel's world-class advanced
defense system helplessly buckled under a surprise attack by Hamas armed
with conventional artillery and primitive means," said Oh Se-hoon, the
capital's mayor.
He said the militant group's cross-border rampage on Oct. 7 through
towns in Israel, which killed more than 1,200 people at the time, showed
that superior military capabilities did not mean much if the enemy
mounted a successful surprise attack.
Wednesday's drills simulated attacks on a major water supply facility,
telephone network stations, and an underground communications and power
cable corridor.
Seoul's distance of just 38 km (24 miles) from the military border with
the North makes it particularly susceptible to an attack at any time, Oh
added.
The densely populated center of government, business and finance is home
to 9.4 million people, with an additional 1.4 million who work and go to
school there each day.
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South Korean soldiers take part in an anti-terror drill against
North Korea's possible provocations amid mounting tensions on the
Korean peninsula, in Seoul, South Korea, December 27, 2023.
REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Oh has adopted a hardline position against North Korea, arguing that
the South must possess its own nuclear weapons as the only way to
neutralize the threat from Pyongyang.
However, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has ruled out owning
nuclear weapons, making it a priority instead to bolster a military
alliance with the United States and restore security ties with
Japan.
The drills came on a day that South Korea imposed new sanctions on
eight North Koreans linked to nuclear and missile programs.
The neighbors have clashed at sea and one of the South's islands was
bombed by the North, killing scores on both sides, but there has
been no direct attack on Seoul since the end of the Korean War in
1953.
This month's test of the North's latest ballistic missile followed
November's successful launch of its first military spy satellite,
while a constitutional revision in September enshrined use of
nuclear weapons as a national defense policy.
(Reporting by Daewoung Kim, Jimin Jung and Jack Kim; Editing by
Clarence Fernandez)
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