S. Korea starts drills despite N. Korea threats - Military News | News From Afghanistan, Iraq And Around The World - Military Times

Webtools

Click here for Military Times Webtools
Print Email
Bookmark and Share
http://www.militarytimes.com/news/2010/08/ap_koreas_war_games_080510/

S. Korea starts drills despite N. Korea threats


By Jin-Man Lee - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Aug 5, 2010 21:27:59 EDT

ABOARD THE ROK DOKDO — South Korean troops fired artillery and dropped sonar buoys into the Yellow Sea as naval drills kicked off near the spot where a warship sank four months ago.

Some 4,500 South Korean troops aboard more than 20 ships and submarines as well as about 50 aircraft were mobilized Thursday to take part in the five days of naval exercises off the west coast, including spots near the Koreas’ maritime border, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

North Korea called the drills a military provocation that threatened to reignite war on the Korean peninsula.

“If the puppet warmongers dare ignite a war, [North Korea] will mercilessly destroy the provokers and their stronghold by mobilizing most powerful war tactics and offensive means beyond imagination,” the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland said in a statement carried by North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency.

KCNA reiterated the committee’s message in a separate report later Thursday, warning North Korea will retaliate at “even the slightest sign of attack.”

In Washington, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said North Korea should not feel in any way threatened by these exercises as they are defensive in nature.

Troops aboard the 14,000-ton ROK Dokdo, an amphibious landing ship, patrolled the deck as Lynx helicopters dropped sonar devices into the sea in search of enemy submarines. A 1,200-ton frigate remained on standby, ready to bomb the target.

The fleet dispatched for the exercises also includes three 1,800-ton submarines and a 4,500-ton destroyer, Cmdr. Won Hyung-sik of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in Seoul.

The drills come weeks after South Korea’s joint military exercises with the U.S. off the east coast — maneuvers held in response to the deadly March sinking of the South Korean warship Cheonan, which killed 46 South Korean sailors.

The U.S. will also send the aircraft carrier George Washington, which participated in last month’s drills off the east coast, to South Korea again for their annual military exercises, called “Ulchi Freedom Guardian,” Morrell told reporters.

The exercises, set for Aug. 16 to 26, will take place in the Yellow Sea as well as in the waters off South Korea’s east coast, he said.

A five-nation team of investigators concluded in May that a North Korean torpedo fired from a submarine sank the 1,200-ton Cheonan as the warship carried out routine surveillance. North Korea denied sinking Cheonan.

The waters off the west coast have been the site of several naval clashes between the Koreas. North and South have engaged in three bloody battles near the line, most recently in November, and Cheonan went down in March not far from the border.

Pyongyang warned earlier in the week it would “counter the reckless naval firing projected by the group of traitors with strong physical retaliation” and advised civilian ships to stay away from the maritime border.

The North also threatened to respond to last month’s South Korea-U.S. military exercises with “nuclear deterrence” but South Korean military officials said there was no sign of unusual North Korean military activity.

North Korea routinely issues such threats, especially when the South holds joint military drills with the U.S. Pyongyang sees the exercises as a rehearsal for an invasion. The U.S. has 28,500 troops in South Korea.

South Korea was closely monitoring North Korea’s military but spotted no unusual activity Thursday, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

———

Associated Press writers Kwang-tae Kim and Sangwon Yoon contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea.

Videos You May Be Interested In

Leave a Comment





Contests and Promotions


Free Stickers


promo Click here and we'll send you a FREE AFGHANISTAN, IRAQ, VIETNAM, or DESERT STORM sticker.

MIl-MALL

Browse and buy some of the awesome products we have at Mil-mall.com

Military Times Gear Shop

Military Discounts


Save on your purchases!
In honor of your military service, you can find regular and name brand products at a special discount.