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N.Korea says war with South would go nuclear

N.Korea vows to strike back if S.Korea holds live-fire drill
Seoul (AFP) Dec 17, 2010 - North Korea's military threatened Friday to strike back if South Korea goes ahead with a planned live-fire drill on a border island which the communist state shelled last month. "Second and third self-defensive blows that cannot be predicted will be dealt" if the South holds the one-day drill scheduled between Saturday and Tuesday, the North's military said. "The intensity and range of the firepower will be more serious than on November 23," it said in a statement carried on the official KCNA news agency.

The bombardment of Yeonpyeong island last month killed two marines and two civilians, injured 18 people and damaged dozens of homes. KCNA said the warning was delivered earlier Friday to the South. The South's military has said its artillery will be aimed away from the North as usual during the upcoming drill, but it will respond strongly if provoked. Members of the US-led United Nations Command are scheduled to observe the drill and about 20 US soldiers will play a supporting role.

There was no immediate comment from the South's military on the warning. Yeonpyeong is just south of the Yellow Sea border drawn by United Nations forces after the 1950-53 war, which the North refuses to recognise. It claims the seas around the island as its own maritime territory. A firing drill into the Yellow Sea by South Korean marines based on the island on November 23 was answered by the North's deadly bombardment. "The area they have set for the Yeonpyeong island exercise is our sea territory that cannot be touched by anyone," the North's military said.

China to lease N.Korean islands for free trade zone: report
Tokyo (AFP) Dec 17, 2010 - China is planning to lease two North Korean river islands on its border with the isolated country to set up free trade zones and tourism, Japan's Asahi Daily reported Friday. China plans to build factories to make beverages and other products, while North Korea would vacate the islands on the Yalu River and relocate the 1,000 households there, but would then provide workers for the factories, it said. China plans to kick off the project in May after it acquired the rights to use the land for 50 years and continued with talks to extend the lease period to 100 years, the newspaper said, citing unnamed Chinese sources.

One of the islands, which Chinese call Huangjinping, is about 11 square kilometres (4.2 square miles) and is separated by a narrow waterway from the jurisdiction of the Chinese city of Dandong in Liaoning province. The other island, about 12 square kilometres in size and further north, is called Heihua in Chinese. They are located in the Yalu River, also known as the Amnok River, the English-language Asahi Daily said. North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il apparently discussed the island development plan with Chinese leaders when he visited China earlier this year. While Beijing regards the project as a form of economic aid to Pyongyang, Chinese businesses expect to reap huge benefits from making use of cheap North Korean labour, the Japanese newspaper reported.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Dec 17, 2010
North Korea's military threatened Friday to strike back with deadly firepower if South Korea goes ahead with a live-fire drill on a border island which the communist state shelled last month.

The North "will deal the second and third unpredictable self-defensive blow" to protect its territorial waters if the South holds the one-day drill scheduled sometime between Saturday and Tuesday, it said.

"It will be deadlier than what was made on November 23 in terms of the powerfulness and sphere of the strike," said the military statement carried on the North's official news agency.

The bombardment of Yeonpyeong island last month killed two marines and two civilians, injured 18 people and damaged dozens of homes, and came after a firing drill into the sea by South Korean marines based on the island.

The latest warning sharply raised the stakes in the regional crisis, amid diplomatic moves to ease tensions. The news agency said the military's message was delivered earlier Friday to the South.

The South, outraged at the first shelling of civilian areas since the 1950-53 war, has fortified Yeonpyeong with more troops and artillery and vowed to use air power against any future attack.

Its military has said artillery will be aimed away from the North as usual during the upcoming drill, but it will respond strongly if provoked.

Members of the US-led United Nations Command are scheduled to observe the drill and about 20 US soldiers will play a supporting role.

But a top US general Thursday voiced concern over a possible "chain reaction".

General James Cartwright, vice chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the drill was being held on a "well-established and well-used" range in a transparent way, but could draw a North Korean reaction.

"What we worry about obviously is... if North Korea were to react to that in a negative way and fire back at those firing positions on the islands, that would start potentially a chain reaction," Cartwright told reporters.

"What you don't want to have happen out of that is for... us to lose control of the escalation."

Russia urged South Korea not to go ahead, warning the action risked escalating tensions with North Korea "in order to prevent a further escalation of tensions on the Korean peninsula," according to a foreign ministry statement.

Seoul military spokesmen had no immediate comment on whether it would proceed with the drill. The defence ministry, in a statement, suggested it would.

"Our military's stance is that we do not need to react to every single threat and unreasonable statement," it said.

US State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said there was nothing provocative about the exercise.

"A country has every right to train and exercise its military in its own self-defence," he added.

"North Korea should not use any future legitimate training exercises as a justification to undertake further provocative action."

Yeonpyeong is just south of the Yellow Sea border drawn by United Nations forces after the war, which the North refuses to recognise. It claims the seas around the island as its own maritime territory.

In an earlier message, Pyongyang's official website Uriminzokkiri warned that another war with South Korea would involve nuclear weapons.

Pyongyang's disclosure last month of an apparently working uranium enrichment plant -- a potential new source of bomb-making material -- also heightened regional security fears.

US politician Bill Richardson, a veteran troubleshooter with North Korea, is paying a private visit to Pyongyang to try to ease tensions.

And the US envoy to stalled six-party talks on the North's nuclear disarmament, Sung Kim, held talks in Seoul Friday with his South Korean counterpart Wi Sung-Lac.

In Beijing, a US delegation led by Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg wrapped up three days of "useful" discussions on the Korean peninsula situation, the US embassy said.

The United States, China, the two Koreas, Japan and Russia are members of the denuclearisation forum which the North abandoned in April 2009, a month before its second atomic weapons test.

Host China along with Russia is trying to revive the forum to ease the crisis, and the North says it is willing to talk. But the United States, South Korea and Japan say it must first mend ties with the South and show genuine seriousness about abandoning its nuclear drive.



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US And Russia Find Some Common Ground On The Koreas
Moscow, Russia (RIA Novosti) Dec 17, 2010
On Wednesday night, South Korea's Special Representative for Korean Peninsula Peace and Security Affairs Wi Sung-lac departed from Moscow after talks at the Russian Foreign Ministry, two days after North Korean Foreign Minister Park Ui Chun had been there. These visits might look like the usual and often useless routine that always precedes the latest round of six-party talks on the North ... read more







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