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25 mars 2013 1 25 /03 /mars /2013 18:35

Nuclear north korea

 

Mar. 25, 2013 – Defense News (AFP)

 

SEOUL — A new South Korea-U.S. pact providing for a joint military response even to low-level provocation by North Korea offers an added deterrent at a time of elevated tension, the South said Monday.

 

The two allies signed the military agreement Friday in a move likely to fuel fresh outrage in Pyongyang, which has spent the past few weeks denouncing joint South Korea-U.S. military exercises.

 

While existing agreements provide for U.S. engagement in the event of a full-scale conflict, the new protocol addresses the response to low-level action such as a limited cross-border incursion.

 

It guarantees U.S. support for any South Korean retaliation and allows Seoul to request any additional U.S. military force it deems necessary.

 

“This allows both nations to jointly respond to the North’s local provocations, with the South taking the lead and the U.S. in support,” Defense Ministry spokesman Kim Min-Seok said. “It will have the effect of preventing the North from daring to provoke us.”

 

The U.S. has close to 30,000 troops stationed in South Korea with the option to bring in reinforcements from its military bases in Japan.

 

The “provocative” scenarios envisaged by the new pact include maritime border incursions, shelling of border islands, and infiltration by low-flying fighter jets or special forces.

 

The chairman of the South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Jung Seung-Jo, said the accord would allow for “strong retaliation” that would make North Korea “bitterly regret” any provocative move.

 

The protocol was signed just days before the third anniversary of the 2010 sinking of a South Korean warship, the Cheonan, with the loss of 46 lives. South Korea said it was sunk by a North Korean torpedo, although Pyongyang denies any involvement.

 

Later that year, North Korea shelled the South Korean border island of Yeonpyeong, killing four people.

 

Angered by United Nations sanctions imposed after its nuclear test in February, North Korea has issued a wave of threats over the past month — ranging from a surgical military strike to nuclear war.

 

The North’s young leader, Kim Jong-un, recently made a series of visits to front-line military units across the country, during which he threatened to “wipe out” South Korean military units on another border island, Baengnyeong.

 

During a trip Monday to Baengnyeong marking the 2010 sinking, South Korean Defence Minister Kim Kwan-Jin accused the North’s leader of heightening military tensions.

 

“Kim Jong-Un’s frequent front-line inspections are aimed at creating a warlike situation,” the minister said, urging South Korean soldiers to retaliate strongly against North Korean provocation.

 

South Korea on Monday held a naval exercise involving combat corvettes and missile patrol ships close to the disputed maritime border.

 

The de facto maritime boundary, the Northern Limit Line, is not recognized by Pyongyang, which argues it was unilaterally drawn by U.S.-led U.N. forces after the 1950-53 Korean War. It was the scene of deadly naval clashes in 1999, 2002 and 2009.

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