Friday, May 29, 2009

SKorea, US upgrade alert after NKorea threat: ministry

AFP - Thursday, May 28SEOUL, (AFP) - - South Korean and US troops went on higher alert after North Korea announced it is scrapping the armistice that has been in force on the peninsula for more than five decades.
"As of 7:15 am Thursday (2215 GMT Wednesday), the US-South Korea Combined Forces Command upgraded Watch Conditions by a notch to Stage Two," Seoul's defence ministry said in a statement.

"Surveillance over the North will be stepped up, with more aircraft and personnel mobilised," said spokesman Won Tae-Jae.

North Korea announced Wednesday it was abandoning the armistice that ended the 1950-53 Korean War and warned it could launch a military attack on the South, two days after testing an atomic bomb for the second time.

Its latest display of anger was prompted by the South's decision to join a US-led international initiative to stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction.

The Proliferation Security Initiative ( PSI ) can involve stopping and searching ships.

The North said its military would no longer be bound by the truce that ended hostilities in the war, in which the United States led a United Nations force defending the South.

"Any tiny hostile acts against our republic, including the stopping and searching of our peaceful vessels... will face an immediate and strong military strike in response," its military said.

The United States still has 28,500 troops stationed in South Korea.

Won said it was the fourth time since 1982 that the watch conditions (Watchcon) had been upgraded to stage two. The last time was in October 2006, after the North's first nuclear test.

He said surveillance would be focused along the Demilitarised Zone which divides the peninsula, the Joint Security Area at Panmunjom village and the Northern Limit Line -- the disputed border in the Yellow Sea.

"We are maintaining a tight defence posture to prevent the North's military provocations," Won said. "The military will deal sternly with provocative acts."

The North has previously threatened to abandon the truce.

"This is the fifth time in 15 years that they've sought to nullify the armistice governing the Korean War," said White House spokesman Robert Gibbs in Washington.

"I think their actions would be better focused on living up to their rights and obligations."

Analysts said there was a growing possibility of limited armed conflict between the two Koreas.

"The possibility of military clashes, especially at the potential flashpoints near the sea border, are becoming reality," Paik Hak-Soon of the Sejong Institute told AFP.

"Should a naval clash occur again, we're going to see a very different one from the past two," Paik said in reference to naval battles in 1999 and 2002 which were "localised" incidents.

Professor Kim Yong-Hyun, of Dongguk University, said the North was likely to follow up by firing short-range missiles or artillery shells into the Yellow Sea, or by capturing South Korean fishing boats near the disputed border.

"We're watching a game of chicken being played on the Korean peninsula," Kim told journalists.

The US-led UN Command said it remained committed to the armistice, which "has served as the legal basis for the ceasefire in Korea for over 55 years and significantly contributes to stability in the region.

"The armistice remains in force and is binding on all signatories, including North Korea," it said in a statement. "The UN Command will adhere to the terms of the armistice and the mechanisms that support it."

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