‘Clear & present danger’: S. Korean foreign minister says about N. Korea, US deterrence is the only hope


South Korean Foreign Minister Park Jin in an exclusive interview with CNN on Wednesday said that North Korea is a ‘clear and present danger.’ This comes as Pyongyang tested intercontinental ballistic missiles and nuclear-capable long-range multiple rocket launchers last week.

“What North Korea is doing is completely wrong. They have been escalating nuclear and missile threats, and threatnening the peace and stability in the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia,” Park said. He added, North Korean President Kim Jong Un’s frequent missile tests and repeated threats of using nuclear weapons were a display of aggression and the only way to tackle it is through extended US deterrence.

Following the recent missile tests, Kim’s sister Kim Yo Jong also warned of more tests unless the United States halts its military drills with South Korea, threatening to make the Pacific Ocean a “shooting range.”

However, Park said that such an act will only strengthen South Korea’s alliance with the US, as “extended deterrence is the only way that we can effictively protect out country from North Korean aggression.”

He mentioned that the deterrence would involve “effective deployment of US strategic assets, exercises and training.”

The South Korean ministry showed little hope of easing tensions with North Korea, saying that there were no active negotiations and Kim would not give up on his idea of nuclear weapons voluntarily.

“We have to create an environment where North Korea has no choice but to come back to the negotioation table,” said Park to CNN. He added that past experiences had shown that Kim would not negotiate when he senses weakness in his opponents. 

Therefore, the lesson South Korea learned from this is when we are strong, “North Korea comes to the dialogue table. When we are weak, they try to take advantage of that vulnerability. So we have to prepare ourselves through our defense and also through deterrence to talk with the North.”

(with inputs from agencies)



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *