Friday, July 23, 2010

North Korea Vows Physical Response---As Tensions Heighten!


23 July 2010 Last updated at 05:07 ET

North Korea vows 'physical response' to US exercise


The US-South Korean war games will take place this coming weekend North Korea has promised a "physical response" to joint US-South Korean military exercises this weekend.

The comments came as Asian foreign ministers met in Vietnam for a regional security forum.

The forum has been dominated by the crisis resulting from North Korea's alleged sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

The US has accused Pyongyang of engaging in "provocative" behaviour and has announced new sanctions against it.

North Korea's delegation spokesman at the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean) Regional Forum (ARF) in Hanoi said the military exercises - which begin on Sunday - were an example of 19th Century "gunboat diplomacy" and went against the sovereignty and security of his country.

"It is a new century and Asian countries are in need of peace and development, and DPRK [North Korea] is also moving to that end," said Ri Tong-il.

He said the exercises went beyond defensive training and would involve "sophisticated weapon equipment".

"It is a threat to the Korean peninsula and the region of Asia as a whole. And the DPRK's position is clear: there will be physical response to the threat imposed by the United States militarily."

Washington and Seoul say the war games - involving the aircraft carrier USS George Washington, 20 other ships and submarines, 100 aircraft and 8,000 personnel - are intended to deter North Korean aggression.

China has criticised the plans and warned against any action which might "exacerbate regional tensions".

'Provocative'

The Asean Regional Forum is working to agree a joint statement addressing inter-Korean tensions - something which has so far proved a challenging task.

BBC's Rachel Harvey in Hanoi said there had been hopes that the forum could be a chance to reduce tensions on the Korean peninsula.


Hillary Clinton visited the Demilitarised Zone between the Koreas earlier this week But if anything, the proximity of the protagonists seems to be inflaming sentiment, our correspondent adds.

South Korea already has strong backing from the US over its condemnation of the North.

On Friday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who is attending the forum, accused Pyongyang of launching a "campaign of provocative, dangerous behaviour".

On Wednesday, the US announced it was to impose new sanctions on North Korea, aimed at halting nuclear proliferation and the import of luxury goods.

The Cheonan warship sank in March near the disputed inter-Korean maritime border with the loss of 46 South Korean sailors.

An international investigation said it was sunk by a North Korean torpedo, but Pyongyang has rejected the charge and demanded its own probe.

North Korean and US-led UN Command military officials held rare talks on the sinking on Friday in the truce village of Panmunjom in the Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas.

The talks lasted two hours, Yonhap news agency said. The results were not known, but they were believed to have set out the details for further higher-level talks on the issue.

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