UN members concerned China, Russia helping North Korea -US' Austin
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[November 14, 2023]
By Jack Kim and Ju-min Park
SEOUL (Reuters) -U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said on Tuesday
U.N. member states enforcing the Korean War armistice were concerned
that China and Russia were helping North Korea expand its military
capabilities by enabling Pyongyang to evade U.N. sanctions, .
The UN states and South Korea vowed a united response to any aggression
or attacks by North Korea on the south, they said in a statement at the
Seoul meeting attended by Austin and defence officials of the 17
countries that make up the U.N. Command (UNC), the body that oversees
the armistice.
"We are deeply concerned that the PRC and Russia are helping the DPRK
expand its capabilities by enabling it to evade sanctions from the U.N.
Security council," Austin said, referring to the People's Republic of
China and North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic
of Korea.
"We're also troubled by the recent growth in military cooperation
between Russia and the DPRK," he said.
Washington has accused North Korea of supplying military equipment to
Russia for use in its war with Ukraine, and Moscow of providing
technical military support to help the North.
North Korea and Russia have denied any arms deals, though their leaders
pledged closer military cooperation when they met in September in
Russia's far east.
Asked about Austin's comment, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "All
such statements are absolutely unfounded, they are not substantiated by
anything, and each new similar statement only further devalues all
others in this regard."
China, North Korea's closest ally, has said it was complying with
international obligations.
The UNC "will be united upon any renewal of hostilities or armed attack
on the Korean peninsula," a joint statement between UNC and South Korea
said, condemning North Korea's "unlawful" nuclear and ballistic missile
programs.
South Korean Defence Minister Shin Won-sik said Pyongyang had been
warned not to attempt any aggressive acts, noting that unlike in 1950,
when the Korean War broke out, North Korea is now a member state of the
United Nations.
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US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin attends a welcome ceremony
before an annual security meeting with South Korean Defence Minister
Shin Won-sik at the Defence Ministry in Seoul, South Korea on
November 13, 2023. JUNG YEON-JE/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
NORTH CALLS FOR UNC TO BE DISSOLVED
"If North Korea ever invades the South again, it will be
self-contradictory, where a U.N. member state would be attacking the
U.N. Command," Shin told the meeting. "If the countries that backed
North Korea during the Korean War ever try to help again, then those
countries will also receive grave punishment from the international
community along with North Korea."
China and the Soviet Union backed the North in combat against U.N.
member states led by the United States. China and North Korea are
parties to the armistice with the UNC.
The UNC member states, which include the United States, Britain,
Australia and Turkey, sent troops or contributed medical support
during the 1950-53 Korean War.
Established in 1950, the UNC was mandated to restore peace and
enforce the armistice while acting as a channel of communication
with North Korea.
It is led by the commander of the U.S. military stationed in South
Korea.
North Korea on Monday called the UNC "a U.S. tool for confrontation"
that has nothing to do with the United Nations and an "illegal war
organisation" that must be dissolved if the outbreak of a new war on
the Korean peninsula is to be prevented.
On Monday, Austin and Shin agreed to revise a bilateral security
agreement aimed at deterring North Korea's growing nuclear and
missile threats.
The defence chiefs said they would step up joint drills and
cooperate with Japan to deter and better prepare for any North
Korean attack, while seeing the need for dialogue as a path toward
peace on the peninsula.
The U.S. and South Korean navies are carrying out joint drills this
week off the east coast of the peninsula, including anti-submarine
exercises, the South Korean navy said on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Jack Kim, Ju-min Park, Soo-hyang Choi and Daewoung
Kim; Editing by Ed Davies, Gerry Doyle and Bernadette Baum)
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