South Korea, U.S. discussing nuclear exercises as tensions flare with
North -Yoon
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[January 02, 2023]
By Soo-hyang Choi
SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea and the United States are discussing
possible joint exercises using U.S. nuclear assets, South Korean
President Yoon Suk-yeol said, as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
labelled the South its "undoubted enemy" in flaring cross-border
tensions.
Yoon's comments, in a newspaper interview published on Monday, come
after he called for "war preparation" with an "overwhelming" capability,
following a year marked by the North's record number of missile tests,
and the intrusion of North Korean drones into the South last week.
"The nuclear weapons belong to the United States, but planning,
information sharing, exercises and training should be jointly conducted
by South Korea and the United States," Yoon said in the interview with
the Chosun Ilbo newspaper.
The newspaper quoted Yoon as saying the joint planning and exercises
would be aimed at a more effective implementation of the U.S. "extended
deterrence," and that Washington was also "quite positive" about the
idea.
The term "extended deterrence" means the ability of the U.S. military,
particularly its nuclear forces, to deter attacks on U.S. allies.
A Pentagon spokesperson said: "We have nothing to announce today," when
asked about Yoon's comments, adding that the alliance remains
"rock-solid."
Yoon's remarks were published a day after North Korean state media
reported that its leader Kim called for developing new intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and an "exponential increase" of the
country's nuclear arsenal.
At a meeting of the ruling Workers' Party meeting last week, Kim said
South Korea has now become the North's "undoubted enemy" and rolled out
new military goals, hinting at another year of intensive weapons tests
and tension.
Inter-Korean ties have long been testy but have been even more frayed
since Yoon took office in May, promising a tougher stance on the North.
On Sunday, North Korea fired a short-range ballistic missile off its
east coast, in a rare late-night, New Year's Day weapons test, following
three ballistic missiles launched on Saturday.
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South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol
speaks at an interview with Reuters in Seoul, South Korea, November
28, 2022. REUTERS/Daewoung Kim/File Photo
The North's official KCNA news agency said the projectiles were
fired from its super-large multiple rocket launcher system, which
Kim said "has South Korea as a whole within the range of strike and
is capable of carrying tactical nuclear warheads."
The North's race to advance its nuclear and missile programmes has
renewed debate over South Korea's own nuclear armaments, but Yoon
said in the Chosun Ilbo interview that maintaining the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons remained important.
To better cope with the North's growing threats, South Korea's
military said on Monday it had established a new directorate under
the Joint Chiefs of Staff to counter the North's nuclear and weapons
of mass destruction capabilities.
North Korea, meanwhile, conducted a reshuffle of its military
leadership at the year-end party gathering, sacking Pak Jong Chon,
the second-ranked military official after Kim, and replacing its
defence minister and the chief of the army's General Staff,
according to state media.
The reason for Pak's replacement was not immediately known, although
Pyongyang regularly revamps its leadership and uses the party event
to announce major personnel reshuffles.
Hong Min, a senior researcher at the Korea Institute for National
Unification, said this year could be a "year of crisis" with
military tension on the Korean peninsula going beyond 2017, when
Pyongyang first test-fired an ICBM and also conducted its sixth
nuclear test.
"North Korea's hardline stance...and aggressive weapons development
when met with South Korea-U.S. joint exercises and proportional
response could raise the tension in a flash, and we cannot rule out
what's similar to a regional conflict when the two sides have a
misunderstanding of the situation," Hong said.
(Reporting by Soo-hyang Choi; Additional reporting by David
Brunnstrom in Washington; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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