U.S., South Korea start military drills as North protests

(Reuters) – The U.S. and South Korean militaries kicked off large exercises on Sunday to underscore deterrence against North Korea after accusing the reclusive communist state of sinking a warship.

Pyongyang warned that the drill had pitched the peninsula onto the brink of war.

U.S. naval vessels, including the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS George Washington, began the drills by setting off from South Korean ports where they had called last week in a show of force timed with a high-level meeting between the two allies.

North Korea drove tensions to new heights after a team of investigators, led by South Korea’s military, accused it of firing a torpedo in March to sink the corvette Cheonan, killing 46 men.

The United States announced new sanctions on the North last week, freezing the assets of Pyongyang’s leaders it said were earned through illcit activities and cutting off the flow of cash to them. The moves would also ban travel by some individuals.

China had objected to the drills.

Beijing criticized the introduction of large-scale military equipment into the Yellow Sea off the peninsula’s west coast, prompting a move of the bulk of the exercises to areas off the east coast.

On Saturday, the North’s powerful National Defense Commission vowed to launch a “sacred war” against the United States and South Korea at “any time necessary,” in response to the drills, denounced as “reckless.”

VESSELS, AIRCRAFT

The drills involve more than 200 aircraft, including the F-22 Raptor fighter, and three destroyers, including the USS John S. McCain, part of the 97,000-tonne USS George Washington’s strike group.

Four Japanese military officers will be on board the carrier to observe the drills.

Pyongyang has routinely been shrill in voicing its anger in the past when the allies conducted exercises.

But U.S. officials say further provocations are possible in coming months, especially as the North tries to build political momentum for the succession to leader Kim Jong-il, expected to hand power to his youngest son.

North Korea has called for the resumption of six-party nuclear disarmament talks that it had boycotted since late 2008, a move analysts said was an attempt to put the Cheonan incident behind it and win lucrative aid through negotiations with the South, the United States, Japan, Russia and China.

On Saturday, the North’s foreign ministry said it was ready for dialogue but vowed to respond by force if it had to.

“We are not the one who would be surprised by military threats or sanctions,” a ministry spokesman said.

(Editing by Ron Popeski)

N.Korea says U.S. military drills pose ‘danger’ to region

July 22 (Reuters) – U.S. and South Korean plans to start large-scale joint military drills this month pose a major danger to the region, a North Korean diplomat said on Thursday.

“The decision to hold military drills is a major danger for the security of the region,” North Korean official Ri Tong-il, a member of Pyongyang’s delegation at a regional security forum in Hanoi, told reporters.

South Korea and the United States say the exercises scheduled from July 25 aim to deter North Korea from any future attack, after Seoul blamed Pyongyang for the sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

(Reporting by John Ruwitch; Editing by Jason Szep)

U.S. to send stern message to North Korea

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama’s top diplomat and defense chief head to Seoul this week to discuss ways to respond to North Korea and deter it from any future attack after the sinking of a South Korean warship.

But the high-profile visit by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates risks angering China in the process, with an expected announcement of U.S.-South Korean military exercises that have set off alarms in Beijing.

Tension between North and South Korea remain high following the March sinking of the warship, Cheonan, killing 46 South Korean sailors. Pyongyang has denied responsibility and escaped censure this month from the United Nations, which condemned the attack but, in deference to China, did not blame North Korea.

Assistant Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said the talks in Seoul were aimed at assessing the next steps with North Korea, including whether and how to resume stalled talks about Pyongyang’s nuclear program. Pyongyang said this month it was willing to return to disarmament talks, in limbo since 2007.

“The United States is considering a variety of options associated with North Korea and we will be in deep consultations,” Campbell said.

But he stressed that an essential precondition for any new talks would be that Pyongyang cease its “provocative ways” and commit to denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.

Victor Cha, a former director of Asian Affairs at the White House National Security Council under the Bush administration, said he expected that re-engagement will take a back seat to the main message of deterrence during the visit to Seoul.

“Right now on this trip the focus is going to be on the deterrence part, that will be the big public message … But privately, the conversations will also deal with getting these talks back on track,” said Cha, who works for the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington.

The visit has symbolic overtones, a show of U.S.-South Korean unity 60 years after the outbreak of the 1950-1953 Korean War. Gates will meet some of the 28,000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea on Tuesday.

The trip will culminate Wednesday in the first talks between the U.S. and South Korean secretaries of defense and state. U.S. officials say the top-level event, reserved for only the closest U.S. allies, shows how important Obama views relations with South Korea, Asia’s fourth-largest economy.

Clinton also plans discuss the U.S.-South Korea economic relationship, where President Barack Obama has vowed to push through a long-stalled free trade agreement, as well as South Korea’s preparations to hold the a G20 summit this year.

WAR GAMES

U.S. officials say the talks are likely to yield at least one concrete result: the announcement in Seoul of a series of joint U.S.-South Korean military drills over a period of months in both the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan.

“These are exercises that enhance our anti-submarine warfare capabilities. They will also, by extension, be a show of force to the North Koreans, and send a message — what we hope to be a very strong message — of deterrence,” said Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell.

China, North Korea’s sole ally, has voiced deep concerns about any U.S.-South Korean drills in the Yellow Sea, which separates China and the Korean peninsula, and urged regional powers to put the Cheonan incident behind them.

U.S. officials, briefing reporters ahead of the trip, dismissed those concerns, saying drills in international waters in the Yellow Sea or elsewhere were “routine.”

“This is about sending a message to (North Korea). It’s not about sending a message to the Chinese. And it should not be interpreted as such,” Morrell said.

John Park, a researcher at the United States Institute of Peace who studies Chinese-North Korean relations, said drills risked aggravating ties between the United States and China.

“As much as the (U.S.-South Korean) announcement will be focused on a sending a message to North Korea, the unintended consequence is that messages are also being sent to China,” Park said.

Beijing broke off military-to-military contacts with the United States this year after the Obama administration notified Congress of a plan to sell Taiwan up to $6.4 billion worth of arms. Underscoring its displeasure, Beijing turned down a proposed fence-mending visit by Gates to China in June.

Park said that inside China, some believe the United States and South Korea are using the Cheonan “as its own pretext to enlarge the scope of the U.S.-South Korean alliance” west toward Chinese coastal waters.

“Their question is: Will the anti-submarine warfare exercises signal an expansion of the coverage area of the U.S.-(South Korea) alliance?”

(Additional reporting by Andrew Quinn; Editing by Stacey Joyce)

Amiable mood for N.Korea-UN military talks – officials

July 15 (Reuters) – North Korean and U.N. Command officers held talks on Thursday on the sinking of a South Korean warship in an amiable mood, agreeing to continue dialogue, after Pyongyang had issued threats of war, officials said.

“The atmosphere was very amiable,” said one officer who attended the meeting by five North Korean officers and 11 from the U.S.-led U.N. Command that oversees the Korean War truce. “There were a lot of smiles and a few laughs,” he said.

The meeting was largely about the mechanics of another yet to be scheduled meeting between generals from the two sides, he added.

Another official said the talks were held without outbursts or lengthy and angry arguments by the North attacking the South or the United States.

A joint team of investigators involving military officers and civilian experts from South Korea, the United States and Sweden in May accused the North of launching a torpedo attack on the South Korean corvette Cheonan in March, killing 46 sailors.

North Korea has denied involvement, threatening war against the South for the accusation that it said was a fabrication by Seoul aimed at political gains.

The U.N. Security Council last week condemned the attack but did not directly blame the North.

North Korea first rejected a call by the U.N. Command to meet and discuss any violation of the armistice that ended the 1950-53 Korean War. It later changed its position and said it would accept such a meeting, after Seoul rejected its proposal to send a military team to inspect the sunken ship.

North Korea at the weekend said it was willing to return to nuclear talks with regional powers that it had boycotted for more than a year. Experts said the North was trying to put the Cheonan incident behind it by offering to talk.

South Korea and the United States reacted with scepticism, saying the North must show it is genuinely interested in easing tensions, first by apologising for the ship incident.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert Gates will meet with their South Korean counterparts in Seoul next week to discuss strengthening security ties. (Reporting by Brett Cole and Jack Kim; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)

U.S. man in North Korean prison attempts suicide -KCNA

July 9 (Reuters) – An American being held in North Korea has attempted suicide out of frustration and guilt, the reclusive country’s state media said on Friday.

Aijalon Mahli Gomes, 30, is serving a sentence of eight years hard labour after being convicted in April of illegally entering the country.

“Driven by his strong guilty conscience, disappointment and despair at the U.S. government that has not taken any measure for his freedom, he attempted to commit suicide,” the North’s KCNA news agency said.

“He is now given first-aid treatment at a hospital.”

North Korea has rejected U.S. calls for the release of Gomes and said last month that it was considering how to make his punishment even harsher under the rules of war, as it was in a state of war with the United States.

The case has further strained ties between the North and the United States as Washington backed Seoul’s drive for strong punitive measures at the United Nations following the South’s conclusion that Pyongyang sunk one of its navy ships in March.

The Security Council is likely to adopt a statement condemning the ship’s sinking without explicitly blaming the North, in a setback for Seoul’s attempt to hold Pyongyang accountable. [ID:nTOE66801J]

KCNA said the Swedish embassy in Pyongyang, which represents the United States as it does not have diplomatic ties with the North, had been informed of Gomes’ condition.

Impoverished North Korea, which denies any involvement in the South ship sinking, has in the past used detained American citizens as bargaining chips.

Gomes had been teaching English in Seoul for about two years before making the trip to North Korea in January. He was also active in Protestant churches, his colleagues said.

He likely crossed into North Korea in support of U.S. Christian missionary Robert Park, who entered the North on Christmas Day to raise awareness about its human rights abuses, according to an activist who helped arrange Park’s trip. [ID:nTOE62N0AF]

Park was detained and eventually released.

In previous cases, North Korea, the focus of multinational talks aimed at reining in its nuclear weapons programme, has typically released Americans a few months after their capture after trying to win concessions. (Reporting by Jack Kim; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

U.N. response on S.Korea ship raises calls for North talks

SEOUL, July 9 (Reuters) – The U.N. Security Council’s likely adoption of a statement on the sinking of a South Korean war on Friday without explicitly blaming the North will begin to shift focus to disarmament talks aimed at reining in Pyongyang.

The conclusion of a month-long diplomacy orchestrated by South Korea and the United States with a Council president’s statement will also likely mean the levelling off of tension fuelled by threats of war, analysts said.

“This bodes well for the six-party talks, in the way the wording stresses peace and security in Northeast Asia, which also has China’s role as mediator in mind,” said Baek Seung-joo of the state-affilaited Korea Institute for Defence Analyses in Seoul.

South Korea had hoped to see the Council adopt a new resolution with binding sanctions imposed on its neighbour as punishment for what it sees as a torpedo attack launched from a submarine that intruded into disputed waters.

Diplomats at the U.N. said a draft statement circulated on Thursday by the United States condemned what it called an attack leading to the sinking of the Cheonan but stopped short of unequivocally blaming the North.

The draft has been agreed by the five permanent council members, including Pyongyang’s ally China, and will likely be put to a vote when its 15 member states meet again on Friday at 1330 GMT, U.N. officials said. [ID:nN08234035]

“This falls short of the (South Korean) government’s plan to hold the North responsible at the Security Council and to put sanctions,” Baek said.

South Korea, Japan and the United States already have sanctions in place aimed at punishing the North for the sinking of the corvette Cheonan in March that killed 46 sailors, and Seoul may impose more as it had pledged to do in its aftermath.

The president’s statement, with the absence of a blame laid on the North, reflected the traditional course of diplomacy taken by China and also Russia that was often based on self interest over what other states presented as hard evidence, Baek said.

“China’s interest in this case was to check against U.S. control over the Korea issue,” he said.

The six-way talks by the two Koreas, the United States, Japan and Russia and hosted by China had been stalled since late 2007 and its core agreement to compensate Pyongyang in return for moves to end its nuclear programme appeared to lose all momentum as the North defied warnings and tested a long-range missile and set off a nuclear device in 2009, drawing more U.N. sanctions.

Analysts said those sanctions squeezed the North’s failed economy deeper into hardship and drove Pyongyang’s leaders to take provocative actions to divert attention from domestic woes and boost the stakes for disarmament talks. [ID:nTOE65R07W]

“As long as Kim Jong-il’s ‘military-first policy’ is in place, we can’t rule out the possibility of a second and third Cheonan incident,” said Ha Young-sun, international relations professor at the Seoul National University.

The Security Council statement will also ease discord between China and South Korea, a major investor and trading partner and may help to disperse friction between them that flared over large scale naval drills in the Yellow Sea.

Cai Jian, professor of Korean studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, said China, South Korea and others were searching for a compromise to put the worst of the recent discord behind them.

“This (draft) statement would be impossible unless the various sides were willing to compromise. China is compromising by going ahead with the statement that raises serious concern about the Cheonan, and South Korea has backed away from demanding that North Korea is condemned by name.” (Additional reporting by Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

North Korea warns U.N. council of military “follow-up”

(Reuters) – North Korea’s U.N. envoy said on Tuesday that any U.N. Security Council action over the sinking of a South Korean naval ship that was hostile to Pyongyang would be met by a military “follow-up.”

World | South Korea | North Korea

Seoul, which has accused North Korea of torpedoing the corvette Cheonan on March 26, killing 46 sailors, brought the dispute to the Security Council this month, asking the 15-nation body to take action to deter “further provocation.”

“If the Security Council release any documents against us condemning or questioning us in any document then myself as diplomat I can do nothing, but the follow-up measures will be carried out by our military forces,” North Korea’s U.N. Ambassador Sin Son-ho told a rare news conference.

Sin, who was speaking in English, was asked if he meant that North Korea would take military action in response to the adoption of any resolution or statement by the council.

“I told you that if any action is taken by Security Council against us, I lose my job,” he said. “Military will have its own job, I mean follow-up. I gave you the answer. You can prejudge what is the meaning I have told you.”

Sin warned that the situation on the Korean peninsula remained tense due to what he called the “reckless maneuvers” of the South.

He said it was “a touch-and-go situation that war may break out at any time,” adding that “our people and our army will smash our aggressors.”

Delegations from the South and North presented the council on Monday with their positions on the events of March 26.

The council’s president, Mexican Ambassador Claude Heller, said after the two separate informal meetings that council members were gravely concerned about the incident and urged both sides to “refrain from any act that could escalate tensions in the region.” He did not say who was to blame.

“FUNNY STORY”

Council diplomats say South Korea is hoping the 15-nation body will rebuke the North. But North Korea’s sole major ally, China, has a veto on the council and is reluctant to support anything that would upset Pyongyang.

Sin reiterated Pyongyang’s position that the South’s allegations about March 26 are a “complete fabrication” and demanded that the North be allowed to send its own investigation crew to the site of the incident.

“This is indeed a funny story,” he said of South Korea’s investigation of the sinking. “Some kind of fiction.”

“If the South Koreans have nothing to hide there is no reason for them not to accept our inspection group,” he said.

The North Korean envoy presented a lengthy rebuttal of the South Korean evidence that Seoul says proved the North’s military torpedoed the Cheonan. He suggested that the actual cause of the sinking may have been rocks in the water.

“I am not here to blame anyone but to clarify what happened,” Sin said.

Sin also dismissed the idea that the investigation of the incident was international, saying that the foreign participants played no more than a symbolic role in what was essentially a South Korean probe.

According to Sin, the evidence against Pyongyang was “fabricated in pursuit of political objectives.” Those objectives included influencing South Korea’s recent elections and poisoning North Korea’s good ties with China, he said.

The United States, Sin said, also benefited politically from the incident, as it helped force Japan to back down from previous demands that the United States close a military base on the island of Okinawa.

(Additional reporting by Patrick Worsnip; editing by David Storey)

Q+A-How serious is the Korean crisis and risk of war?

SEOUL, June 16 (Reuters) – North Korea has repeated its threat to take military action if the U.N. Security Council punishes it for what it says is a fabricated accusation by South Korea that it attacked and sank a navy ship, killing 46 sailors. [ID:nN15271522]

The sinking of the South Korean corvette Cheonan in March was the deadliest incident between the rival Koreas in decades.

Following are some questions about how serious the crisis is, whether it could escalate to an armed confrontation and how the North could react to the outcome of debate at the U.N.

(For more stories, click [ID:nNORKOR])

WILL THERE BE WAR?

Many analysts doubt there will be war, as long as South Korea holds its fire. North Korea’s obsolete conventional armed forces and military equipment mean quick and certain defeat if it wages full-scale war and Pyongyang is well aware of its limits.

South Korea has made it clear it will not retaliate despite investigations that found a torpedo fired by a North Korean submarine sank the corvette Cheonan in March.

It knows the investment community will take fright if it does attack. President Lee Myung-bak’s government has taken the case to the Security Council, rather than take the law into its own hands.

IS EVERYTHING SAFE AND SOUND?

No. As the level of rhetoric rises, there is always a risk of skirmishes which could in turn develop into wider conflict.

Lee raised the stakes by saying in a national address the South would exercise its right to defend itself if the North provoked it again. North Korea has said much the same.

Both have carefully avoided sounding like the aggressor, promising to fight only if the other strikes first.

But South Korea said it would resume loudspeaker broadcasts against the North at their armed border. Pyongyang says it will shoot at the equipment.

South Korea’s defence minister has repeatedly said it would defend itself if the North begins shooting by quickly returning fire with overwhelming intensity.

Another risk could be the build-up of U.S. military forces on the peninsula that will be seen by the North as a sign of imminent invasion, something that leaders in Pyongyang are said to be genuinely afraid of.

The United States, which has about 28,000 troops stationed on the peninsula, threw its full support behind South Korea but said it was working hard to stop the escalation getting out of hand.

WHAT WILL THE SECURITY COUNCIL DO?

South Korea, not a member of the Security Council, and the United States, its key ally who is a permanent member, want the strongest action taken against the North that hits where it will hurt the destitute state’s leaders.

But China, another permanent member and the North’s major backer, will likely veto a resolution, possibly on grounds that the ship incident, unlike Pyongyang’s nuclear tests, is a localised issue that is better addressed by the two rivals and not by the international community.

The alternative is a strongly worded statement by the Security Council that condemns the North’s actions and calls for its pledge not to repeat provocative actions. Such a statement will be non-binding and will not involve prescriptions for sanctions such as a trade embargo.

As the North’s chief U.N. representative said on Tuesday, Pyongyang is also likely to protest against such a statement.

WHAT ARE THE RISKS TO INVESTORS?

Market players have tended to think that confrontation between the two Koreas will not escalate into armed conflict because they believe Seoul will not risk the damage to its own economy and its powerful neighbours in North Asia, who together account for about a sixth of the world’s economic output.

In South Korea, even a nuclear test does little to rattle financial markets, as market players are more concerned with direct armed confrontation and have become largely inured to the North’s rhetoric.

But the latest report of Kim Jong-il calling for war readiness has unnerved financial markets.

Some analysts say historic trends suggest any market losses will remain brief, as long as the two Koreas stop short of all-out war.

(Editing by Paul Tait)

North Korea keen to dish out revenge 44 years on

(Reuters) – North Korea’s incredible run to the quarter-finals of the 1966 World Cup is still regarded as one of soccer’s great fairytales but midfielder An Yong-hak wants to make Portugal pay for eliminating them 44 years ago.

World | Sports | North Korea

The “Chollima” reached the last eight in England after beating Italy in their group and led Portugal 3-0 before a Eusebio-led fightback saw them exit the tournament 5-3.

“Revenge,” An told reporters at the Makhulong stadium. “We want revenge for 1966.”

In only their second appearance at a World Cup finals, the North are the lowest ranked team in South Africa at 91 and have been drawn in the “Group of Death” with Brazil, Portugal and Ivory Coast.

Far from being intimidated, however, North Korea are optimistic about their chances of making the second round and striker Jong Tae-se has predicted a shock victory over Brazil in their Group G opener on June 15.

An recognized the strength of the world’s top ranked side, but he too thought it as possible the North could take all three points from the five-times winners.

“Brazil are the strongest team in the world, they don’t have many weaknesses,” said An, who was born in Japan, played club soccer in South Korea and holds a North Korean passport.

“I’ve asked my Brazilian team mates at my club how to beat them. We don’t have much of a chance to win but it’s not impossible.”

Given the fragile relationship between Pyongyang and Seoul following the sinking of a South Korean naval vessel, it is unlikely the South, which has broadcast rights to all of the Korean peninsula, will give free coverage of the games to North Korea.

Fans would still get the chance to see the games, An said.

“I don’t know if it will be broadcast live in North Korea but it will be broadcast,” he said, adding that he expected to see some North Korean fans in the stadiums.

North Korea will face Ivory Coast in their final group game on June 25, and while An knows that a fit Didier Drogba could run his side ragged, he is eager to face the striker who suffered a broken arm on June 4 in a friendly.

“It would be a real pity if he missed the game. I don’t get the chance to play against world-class players very often,” said An. “If Drogba plays it will make the game much more difficult but I think of him as a soccer hero.”

(Editing by Michael Holden)

North Korean defiance obstacle to effective sanctions: US

Singapore, June 6 (DPA) US Defence Secretary Robert Gates Sunday said any efforts to make North Korea accountable over the sinking of a South Korean warship may have little effect given Pyongyang’s defiant attitude.

North Korea’s stance was an obstacle for finding the adequate measures short of military options, Gates told the BBC on the sidelines of a summit on Asian security here.

‘You can bring together additional pressure, you can do another resolution at the UN,’ Gates said.

‘As long as the regime doesn’t care about what the outside world thinks of it, as long as it doesn’t care about the well-being of its people, there is not a lot you can do about it, to be quite frank, unless you are willing at some point to use military force,’ he said.

‘And nobody wants to do that,’ Gates said.

His remarks came after South Korea filed a complaint to the United Nations Security Council accusing the North of sinking its vessel Cheonan on March 26, causing the death of 46 sailors.

Gates told defence ministers and policymakers at the 2010 Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore Saturday that the US was reviewing additional options to deal with North Korea, but did not elaborate.

‘To do nothing would set the wrong precedent,’ he said, calling on the international community to hold North Korea accountable for the Cheonan sinking.

A multinational investigation concluded that a torpedo from the North likely sank the ship, but Pyongyang denied any involvement and threatened war against the South if any punitive measures are taken.

China PM seeks to cool Korean standoff

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao told South Korea’s President Lee Myung-bak on Friday he condemned acts threatening stability on the Korean Peninsula and understood South Korean grief over the sinking of a naval ship, which Seoul has blamed on the North.

The Chinese leader is on a three-day visit to South Korea, whose deepening standoff with North Korea is straining China’s efforts to stay friendly with both sides of the divided peninsula and keep out of the fray over the sinking of the corvette Cheonan in late March.

Seoul is convinced North Korea torpedoed the Cheonan and, with the United States and Japan, has urged Beijing to join denunciation of the sinking, which killed 46 sailors.

Wen held to China’s position of avoiding blaming its partner North Korea. But he also told South Korea’s Lee Beijing would not “harbour” anyone responsible once China had made its own “fair and objective judgment on who’s at fault”, South Korean official Lee Dong-kwan told reporters.

“China always opposes and condemns any acts detrimental to peace and stability on the peninsula,” Wen told Lee, according to China’s official Xinhua news agency.

“Wen said that as a responsible country, China takes serious note of the results of a joint investigation by South Korea and other countries, as well as the reactions of all parties,” reported Xinhua.

“I understand the grief of the Korean people, especially the family members of those who died,” said Wen.

ON THE BACK FOOT

Wen’s comments reflected China’s efforts to avoid entanglement in the crisis while seeking to dispel regional worries that Beijing is dismissing South Korea’s complaints and protecting Pyongyang.

“China feels it’s on the back foot and has to find a more active posture on the Cheonan incident,” said Zhang Liangui, an expert on North Korea at the Central Party School, a training school for officials in Beijing.

“It’s difficult even for China to influence North Korea’s behaviour. But China will also hope that South Korea steps back so that confrontation can cool down,” he said.

North Korea has said it will rip up military agreements with the South guaranteeing safety of cross-border exchanges, and has reportedly put its military on combat readiness, after Seoul said it would ban trade with the North and stop its commercial ships using South Korean waters following the sinking.

The mounting antagonism between the two Koreas has unnerved investors, worried the confrontation could erupt into conflict. Many analysts say that neither side is ready to go to war but warn there could be more skirmishes, especially along their disputed sea border off the west coast.

Beijing has resisted turning on North Korea publicly, whose leader Kim Jong-il visited China early this month in a show of friendship between the two communist neighbours.

U.S. officials have said Wen may use his visit to South Korea, including a weekend three-nation summit with Japan’s Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama, to spell out how China wants to deal with the confrontation at its northeastern doorstep.

Japan will toughen sanctions against North Korea, the top government spokesman, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirofumi Hirano, said on Friday.

Wen told South Korea’s Lee that “all concerned parties should take a long-term perspective,” said Xinhua.

CHINA UNLIKELY TO CHANGE STANCE

U.S. officials said this week there were signs China, the North’s main benefactor and ally, is reviewing ties with the isolated state.

But South Korean officials doubted Beijing would side with them when Seoul takes the North to the United Nations Security Council over the sinking.

A senior South Korean official said that ultimately Beijing was likely to abstain from a vote on the ship sinking, rather than an outright veto of any statement or resolution directed at North Korea. Wei Zhijiang, a Chinese expert on Korea, agreed.

“I personally do not think that Wen’s visit (to South Korea) will mark a fundamental change in China’s position on the Cheonan incident,” said Wei, a professor at Zhongshan University in southern China who is now a visiting scholar in Tokyo.

“China has its own strategic stake in the Korean Peninsula, and if North Korea is further isolated or sanctioned that would escalate tensions and risk serious instability,” he said.

North Korea has escalated blistering rhetoric since the release of the South Korean investigations’ findings into the warship sinking, threatening to sever all ties with the South.

On Thursday, the North said it was taking the first steps in severing the border link which provides access for South Korean workers to the Kaesong factory park project — the last major commercial link that had been a symbol of reconciliation.

(Additional reporting by Jonathan Thatcher in SEOUL and Huang Yan in BEIJING; Editing by Paul Tait)

South Korea says no chance North will go to war

South Korea sees no chance of the latest tension on the divided peninsula turning to outright war but is deeply concerned that the North may try terror attacks on civilians, a high ranking South Korean official said on Friday.

He also said that though both sides have been careful not to push too far, Seoul was ready to send in troops if there is what he called “extreme provocation” by the North.

Relations on the peninsula have plunged back into the Cold War freezer following the March sinking of a South Korean warship, killing 46 sailors, which an international investigation last week said was caused by a North Korean torpedo in one of the deadliest incidents since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

“I can assure you North Korea will never use that option (full scale war), simply out of national interest,” the South Korean official, who asked not to be named, told foreign reporters.

He said Pyongyang knows major conflict, including the use of nuclear and chemical weapons, would result in the forced reunification of the peninsula.

Analysts say the million-strong but poorly equipped North Korean military is no match for the South and its U.S. ally, which keeps 28,000 troops on the peninsula.

Asked about possible civilian attacks, the official said: “That’s the part over which we have the most concern”.

The South Korean government is already stepping up security ahead of the G20 summit which Seoul hosts in November.

There have been some concerns that the North might use South Korean workers in a joint industrial park just inside its border as hostages.

“In that case we would use the military,” said the official.

But he doubted the North would do anything to damage the Kaesong industrial estate for fear of triggering social unrest. Tens of thousands of families in the area rely on it for their income, in a country which uses handouts to feed its population.

“North Korea is very afraid of shutting down Kaesong,” he said. Most of the salaries for the workers go straight to Pyongyang, making Kaesong an important source of legitimate income for the North Korean leadership.

Both Koreas have said they would fight if the other attacks but have scrupulously avoided giving the impression they would be the first to attack.

However, some analysts warn that the more the hermit North feels pushed into a corner, the more dangerous it will become.

It was that reason that the South has not directly accused North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, the official said.

The mounting tension comes at a difficult time for the North.

Kim Jong-il’s health appears to be waning after a suspected stroke nearly two years ago and he is trying to ensure the succession of his youngest son to the leadership of the family dynasty that has run the impoverished state since its founding after World War Two.

Kim has also set 2012 as the year to reverse his country’s steady economic decline and turn the destitute state into a prosperous nation — something it has no chance of doing without massive outside aid.

“If you read carefully, North Korea is afraid … and we are careful not to hurt their (the military’s) pride,” said the South Korean official.

(Editing by Michael Perry)

US terms ‘odd’ NKorea’s move to severe ties with Seoul

US on Wednesday termed as ‘odd’ North Korea’s decision to sever ties with South Korea over Seoul’s charges that it torpedoed one of its warships and said it was working closely with countries like China to see what can be done to have the ‘greatest impact’ on Pyongyang.

‘I can’t imagine a step that is less in the long-term interest of the North Korean people than cutting off further ties with South Korea,’ State Department spokesman P J Crowley told reporters.

“I think it’s odd,” he said when asked to comment on North Korea’s move to sever all ties with South Korea and abrogate the non-aggression pact.

“South Korea is one of the most dynamic economies in the world…North Korea is unable to care for its citizens. It is unable to feed its people,” Crowley said.

North Korea had yesterday announced its decision to sever ties with Seoul and abrogated the non-aggression pact protesting what it calls a premeditated plot to malign it over the ship-sinking episode.

South Korea has accused North Korea of sinking its warship, the Cheonan, in March and President Lee Myung-bak has called for sanctions against the country.

Crowley said the US did not want the current tensions in the Korean Peninsula to escalate into a military confrontation and warned North Korea of consequences.

“We have no interest in seeing further provocations. The Secretary (of State) made that clear in Beijing today. We are looking to see how we can influence North Korean thinking and, most importantly, North Korean behaviour.

“We’ll be working closely with our regional partners to see what should be done and what can be done to have the greatest impact on the North Korean leadership,” he said.

“There will be consequences for North Korea’s provocative action. We believe there should be a very strong, determined international response.”

The US is in constant contact with the South Korean leadership and those of China and its other international partners on this issue.

He said the US will looking at a variety of options and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has discussed the issue with her Chinese and Japanese counterparts.

Crowley said the US satisfied that China understands the situation.

“I think they understand and will understand how serious South Korea views this. We all want the same thing. We all want peace and stability in the region. There appears to be one country that doesn’t. That’s North Korea,” he said.

“We have worked closely and collaboratively in the past. We’ve sent strong messages to North Korea in the past. China has the same interest that we have,” he said.

It was valuable for Clinton to have a high-level discussions with President Hu Jintao and others in Beijing on the issue, he said.

The State Department spokesman said the US was looking at a range of options.

“There are things that we can do multilaterally. There are things that we can do unilaterally in terms of economic measures. We have done that successfully in the past,” he said.

Crowley said the US has found ways to influence the thinking and put pressure on the North Korean regime and if it thinks that there are options available to it that can deliver “that kind of stern message, we will not hesitate to take that kind of action.”

“We already have broad-based authorities under existing resolutions to take that kind of action and that’s what we have done in the past when we’ve seen these kinds of provocative actions by North Korea. We will not hesitate to do that again,” Crowley said.

North Korea had yesterday said it would completely halt the inter-Korean cooperation after international chorus grew in favour of imposition of sanctions against Pyongyang on the row over sinking of a South Korean naval vessel.

Clinton to address North-South tensions during Seoul visit

Seoul, May 26 (DPA) US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton arrived in Seoul Wednesday for a half-day visit to discuss rising tensions on the Korean peninsula after the sinking of a South Korean warship was blamed on North Korea.

Talks on joint strategies to handle the crisis and Washington’s reaffirmation of its support for Seoul were expected to be central to Clinton’s meetings with her South Korean counterpart, Yu Myung Hwan, and President Lee Myung Bak.

Seoul accused Pyongyang of being responsible for the March 26 sinking of the corvette Cheonan and the ensuing deaths of 46 South Korean sailors. Pyongyang denied the charge despite evidence of a North Korean torpedo’s involvement in the sinking.

During her two-day visit to Beijing this week, Clinton tried to persuade the Chinese leadership to pursue joint diplomatic action against Pyongyang. Beijing, the Stalinist state’s only major diplomatic ally, seemed reluctant.

South Korea said it intends to take the sinking before the UN Security Council, and on Monday, it cut off trade with North Korea while Pyongyang late Tuesday announced it would cut all ties with South Korea.

US President Barack Obama has expressed full support for South Korea’s handling of the crisis. South Korean and US troops are set to conduct joint naval manoeuvres and anti-submarine drills.

North and South Korea remain technically at war after a ceasefire and not a peace treaty ended the 1950-53 Korean War.

South Korean officials ordered out of border factory

Seoul, May 26 (IANS) North Korea Wednesday ordered South Korean government personnel to leave their joint factory complex in the North Korean border town of Kaesong, a top official said, even as tensions between the two countries flared over the sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

The eight South Korean officials, however, told North Korean authorities that they would not be able to leave by the noon deadline because they needed time to pack up, Chun Hae-sung, South Korean unification ministry spokesperson, was quoted as saying by Yonhap news agency.

The North Korean order came a day after the country said it would expel the officials from the factory in Kaesong, where around 110 South Korean firms have hired over 42,000 North Korean workers to manufacture goods.

Relations between the two countries have deteriorated rapidly since last week after a team of international experts said the March 26 sinking of a South Korean warship in the Yellow Sea was caused by a torpedo released by a North Korean submarine. Forty-six crew members died in the incident.

Pyongyang, has however, denied any role in the sinking. After South Korea announced trade bans Monday and said it would approach the UN Security Council over the matter, the North announced its own set of counter-actions Tuesday, including cutting all ties with the South.

CORRECTED – SCENARIOS-North Korea again at centre of regional tension

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across the increasingly tense peninsula if the South goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

Tensions are mounting after the South blamed the North for torpedoing one of its warships, killing 46 sailors.

Following is a look at what may have motivated the North to raise the stakes by sinking the South Korean corvette Cheonan and how it may react to the hard line from the conservative South Korean government of President Lee Myung-bak:

REVENGE

One popularly ascribed motive for the March 26 sinking of the Cheonan was payback for a humiliating defeat in a naval clash in November near their disputed maritime border. The South’s navy was operating under new rules of engagement imposed after Lee took office, to strike fast and strike to win decisively.

The humiliation may have been all the greater because the North, and its self proclaimed “invincible” army, got pounded when it may not even have been looking for a fight in the first place. “It’s a case of getting beaten up when they weren’t even being very cocky,” an expert on the North’s propaganda said.

By most accounts, Kim Jong-il would have to have agreed to the torpedo attack. What may have come as a surprise was that the South was able to come up with evidence — some remains of the torpedo — to prove the North’s involvement.

LEADER UNDER PRESSURE

Some experts say that the attack seems to have been disproportionate to the North’s losses in the November skirmish, especially as most North Koreans would have had no idea the clash had even taken place, and certainly not that it lost.

One explanation is that the reclusive Kim, known at home as the “Dear Leader”, is struggling to secure the succession of his youngest son to head the family dynasty that has run the North since its founding after World War Two.

As a result, he needs to display his strength, especially to the military elite that he has nurtured and put at the top of society’s hierarchy.

Kim himself looks in poor health after an apparent stroke nearly two years ago. His government also reportedly faced rare public unrest after a disastrous change in the value of the currency late last year forced the closure of private markets, which help make up for the state’s inability to supply its own people with enough food.

Dictatorships undergoing internal political turmoil tend to manifest disproportionately belligerent behaviour to the outside world, said Victor Cha, a U.S. expert who had been involved in negotiations with the North.

EXTORTION

North Korea has often staged provocative incidents as a way to get back to the negotiating table with the South and regional powers to extract economic and political concessions.

If this was the motive, then it backfired. Whatever inclination there may have been to bring the six regional powers back together to formulate a massive package of aid to the North in return for Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear arms programme all but disappeared with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Kim Jong-il’s interest may have been more in separate talks with the United States to discuss a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, than with the group hosted by China and also involved South Korea, Japan and Russia.

Some analysts and defectors from the North say the leaders in Pyongyang have a genuine fear of an invasion by the United States launched from the soil of its ally, South Korea. There is also huge mileage for domestic propaganda purposes in telling its public that it was negotiating with the United States on equal footing. Staging a deadly attack in the waters near a naval border it had disputed gives the North’s military an excuse to demand talks on ending a truce.

PEACE TREATY

This is a variation on the above scenario, with the difference that the North is looking for a security framework instead of aid. The Cheonan sinking is the latest in a series of incidents along the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, including an exchange of artillery fire in January.

Kim Jong-il may be hoping to goad the United States into taking more seriously his demands to agree finally a peace treaty to end formally the 1950-53 Korean War. Washington has been reluctant to be lured into those talks, arguing the North must first give up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Much of the justification for his iron rule, and extreme poverty that faces most of his population, is that it is the only way to keep a belligerent United States at bay. A peace treaty would not only allow him to stop raiding his depleted treasury to pay for one of the world’s largest standing armies, some analysts say it would also open the way to international financial aid for his broken economy.

The peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. If Kim keeps making the Yellow Sea border — drawn unilaterally by the U.S.-led United Nations Command at the end of the war — a combat zone, maybe that would eventually lead to peace treaty talks. After all, previous instances of North Korean misbehaviour resulted in negotiations that led to benefits.

ARMS SALES DEMO

North Korea depended heavily on exports of missile and artillery parts for a large part of its income before U.N. sanctions last year for testing a nuclear device sharply cut off its trade. It may have wanted to demonstrate its capabilities in submarine and torpedo warfare.

(Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Bill Tarrant)

SCENARIOS – North Korea again at centre of regional tension

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across the increasing tense peninsula if the South goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

Tensions are mounting after the South blamed the North for torpedoing one of its warships, killing 46 sailors.

Following is a look at what may have motivated the North to raise the stakes by sinking a South Korean battleship and how it may react to the hard line from the conservative South Korean government of President Lee Myung-bak:

REVENGE

One popularly ascribed motive for the March 26 outh Korean corvette Cheonan was payback for a humiliating beating in a naval clash in November near their disputed maritime border. The South’s navy was operating under new rules of engagement imposed after Lee took office, to strike fast and strike to win decisively.

The humiliation may have been all the greater because the North, and its self proclaimed “invincible” army, got pounded when it may not even have been looking for a fight in the first place. “It’s a case of getting beaten up when they weren’t even being very cocky,” an expert on the North’s propaganda said.

By most accounts, Kim Jong-il would have to have agreed to the torpedo attack. What may have come as a surprise was that the South was able to come up with evidence — some remains of the remains of the torpedo — to prove the North’s involvement.

LEADER UNDER PRESSURE

Some experts say that the attack seems to have been disproportionate to the North’s losses in the November skirmish, especially as most North Koreans would have had no idea the clash had even taken place, and certainly not that it lost.

One explanation is that the reclusive Kim, known at home as the “ear Leader” is struggling to secure the succession of his youngest son to head the family dynasty that has run the North since its founding after World War Two.

As a result, he needs to display his strength, especially to the military elite that he has nurtured as leader and put at the top of society’s hierarchy.

Kim himself looks in poor health after an apparent stroke nearly two years ago. His government also reportedly faced rare public unrest after a disastrous change in the value of the currency late last year forced the closure of private markets, which help make up for the state’s inability to supply its own people with enough food.

Dictatorships undergoing internal political turmoil tend to manifest disproportionately belligerent behaviour to the outside world, said Victor Cha, a U.S. expert who had been involved in negotiations with the North.

EXTORTION

North Korea has often staged provocative incidents as a way to get back to the negotiating table with the South and regional powers to extract economic and political concessions.

If this was the motive, then it backfired. Whatever inclination there may have been to bring the six regional powers back together to formulate a massive package of aid to the North in return for Pyongyang’s promise to dismantle its nuclear arms programme all but disappeared with the sinking of the Cheonan.

Kim Jong-il’s interest may have been more in separate talks with the United States to discuss a permanent peace treaty to replace the armistice that ended fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War, than with the the group hosted by China and also involved South Korea, Japan and Russia.

Some analysts and defectors from the North say the leaders in Pyongyang have a genuine fear of an invasion by the United States launched from the soils of its ally, South Korea. There is also huge mileage for domestic propaganda purposes in tellings its public that it was negotiating with the United States on equal footing. Staging a deadly attack in the waters near a naval border it had disputed gives the North’s military an excuse to demand talks on ending a truce.

PEACE TREATY

This a variation on the above scenario, with the difference that the North is looking for a security framwework instead of aid. The Cheonan sinking is the latest in a series of incidents along the disputed maritime border in the Yellow Sea, including an exchange of artillery fire in January.

Kim Jong-il may be hoping to goad the United States into taking more seriously his demands to finally agree a peace treaty to formally end the 1950-53 Korean War. Washington has been reluctant to be lured into those talks, arguing the North must first give up its efforts to build nuclear weapons.

Much of the justification for his iron rule, and extreme poverty that faces most of his population, is that it is the only way to keep a beligerent United States at bay. A peace treaty would not only allow him to stop raiding his depleted treasury to pay for one of the world’s largest standing armies, some analysts say it would also open the way to international financial aid for his broken economy.

The peninsula remains in a technical state of war because the Korean War ended in a truce, not a peace treaty. If Kim keeps making the Yellow Sea border — drawn unilaterally by the U.S.-led United Nations Command at the end of the war — a combat zone, maybe that would eventually lead to peace treaty talks. After all, previous instances of North Korean misbehaviour resulted in negotiations that led to benefits.

ARMS SALES DEMO

North Korea depended heavily on exports of missile and artillery parts for a large part of its income before a U.N. sanctions last year for testing a nuclear device sharply cut off its trade. It may have wanted to demonstrate its capabilities in submarine and torpedo warfare. (Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Bill Tarrant)

North Korea threatens to cut last link with South

North Korea warned it would close the last road link across its increasing tense border with the South if Seoul goes ahead with a threat to broadcast anti-Pyongyang propaganda into its hermit neighbour.

The mounting antagonism has shaken investors, uncertain how far the two Koreas are ready to take their bitter rivalry after the South accused the North of torpedoing on of its warships.

But after a sharp drop in shares and the local currency on Tuesday, Seoul’s financial markets looked stable and the government said it was ready to step in if things looked to be getting out of control.

“The south Korean puppet war-like forces would be well advised to act with discretion, bearing deep in mind that such measures of the KPA (army) will not end in an empty talk,” North Korea’s KCNA news agency quoted a top official as saying.

For a graphic on the ship sinking, click:

http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/RNGS/2010/MAY/SHIP.jpg

China, which almost single-handedly props up the North Korean government and its destitute economy, again called for calm and dialogue.

Beijing has refused to give its backing to an international investigation that last week concluded North Korea in March sank the South Korean Cheonan corvette, killing 46 sailors.

China is certain to block attempts to impose new sanctions on its ally which means the United States, which strongly backs Seoul’s position over the sinking, may have to accept no more than a carefully worded rap over the knuckles for Pyongyang.

Washington is also looking for ways to avoid the issue collapsing into conflict and it will be at the top of the agenda for visiting U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who arrives later in the day from Beijing.

SEVERING TIES

The North on Tuesday announced it was severing all ties with the South, which has announced its own set of measures against Pyongyang for sinking the Cheonan.

Those include resuming, after a six-year lull, the setting up of speakers near the border to broadcast anti-government propaganda and send messages across by balloon.

So far, though, the reclusive state is allowing South Korean workers to enter a joint industrial park that is a lucrative source of income for the Pyongyang government.

The move suggests the isolated North is being careful not to take steps that will cause it real material damage.

But if it does cut the road link to the Kaesong industrial park, it will be unable to function.

Analysts say both Koreas, who have never repeated the open conflict of the 1950-53 Korean War, were unlikely to let their current hostility turn to war.

Apart from Kaesong, there is little economic relationship left between the two, their ties almost frozen since the South’s conservative President Lee Myung-bak took office in 2008.

“North Korea is not closing up Kaesong immediately because it is saving the cards it needs in order to play the game,” said Jang Cheol-hyeon, researcher at the Institute for National Security Strategy.

By paying the workers’ wages directly to Pyongyang, Kaesong is one of the few major legitimate income sources for the North’s secretive leaders, worth tens of millions of dollars a year.

(Additional reporting by Jack Kim, Christine Kim, Jungyoung Park and Choonsik Yoo in Seoul and Arshad Mohammed in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

Clinton urges China to pressure North Korea

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Wednesday it was in the interests of the international community, including China, to persuade North Korea to change its ways.

She told reporters during a brief visit in the South Korean capital that the crisis brought on by the North’s sinking of a South Korean warship required a strong but measured response and said Washington was considering additional options to hold Pyongyang accountable.

“There is the immediate crisis caused by the sinking of the naval vessel which requires a strong but measured response, but there is a longer-term challenge of changing the direction of North Korea.” (Reporting by Arshad Mohammed; Writing by Jonathan Thatcher; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

FACTBOX – South Korea’s industrial park in the North

North Korea said it was cutting all ties with the South, including shutting down a liaison office located at a jointly run factory park, after Seoul imposed sanctions on Pyongyang for torpedoing one of its warships.

Here are some facts about the complex located in the North Korean border city of Kaesong, where South Korean companies use cheap North Korean land and labour to make goods:

OPERATIONS

Just over 120 small to medium-sized South Korean companies employ about 40,000 North Korean workers to make products such as cooking pots, clothes, shoes and watches. The companies receive tax breaks and other incentives from the South to set up there and pay workers a basic monthly salary and social welfare benefits that total $70.

REASON FOR EXISTENCE

The project, which began construction in 2003 and is run by a Hyundai Group affiliate and the South’s Korea Land Corp, was designed to serve as a model of future economic cooperation between the states, which have not formally signed a peace treaty to end their 1950-53 war. South Korea’s leaders envisioned the park eventually employing more than half a million North Koreans working at 2,000 firms, while adding a peace park and hotels.

BENEFIT FOR NORTH

Wages and other fees paid by the South in hard cash go directly into the coffers of the North’s leaders. Critics say the park allows the North to exploit the Kaesong workers for its own benefit with funds generated there helping Pyongyang pay for its various weapons programmes.

RECENT TROUBLES

North Korea has previously restricted traffic over the border, making it more difficult for goods and workers from the South to enter. Last year, North Korea said it was cancelling all wage, rent and tax deals at Kaesong in what analysts said was a hard-nosed negotiating ploy to squeeze more money out of the South. The North held a South Korean worker at the Kaesong complex for about five months for defaming the North’s leaders and also lifted restrictions on border crossings.

LOGISTICS

The South Korean-built park is located about 70 km (45 miles) northwest of Seoul. A new highway and restored rail link run through the Demilitarised Zone buffer dividing the two since the end of the Korean War, taking materials to and from the park. The fenced-off park, with its new buildings, paved roads and steady supply of electricity from the South, marks a stark contrast to the North’s impoverished city of Kaesong, with its dilapidated buildings and broken down infrastructure.

RISKS AND REWARDS

At present, the park brings in tens of millions of dollars a year in legitimate cash for the North’s secretive leaders. But it poses risks because the gleaming South Korean factories turning out high-end consumer goods unavailable in the destitute North serve as a vivid reminder to the expanding North Korean workforce of the vast wealth gap between the two states.

(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz, Christine Kim and Jack Kim; Editing by Alex Richardson)