What's new

South Korea, U.S., Japan sign military info-sharing deal

Hindustani78

BANNED
Joined
Apr 8, 2014
Messages
40,471
Reaction score
-47
Country
India
Location
India
Korea, U.S., Japan sign military info-sharing deal
2014-12-26

South Korea, the U.S. and Japan will sign a trilateral information-sharing arrangement on Monday to better handle the evolving nuclear and missile threats from North Korea, Seoul’s Defense Ministry said Friday.

The arrangement is expected to strengthen the three-way security cooperation that has been lackluster due to historical and territorial feuds between Seoul and Tokyo, and Seoul’s push for a deepened strategic partnership with Beijing.

South Korea’s Vice Defense Minister Baek Seung-joo, U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work and Japan’s Vice Defense Minister Masanori Nishi will sign the arrangement separately in their respective countries on Monday.

Under the deal, South Korea and Japan will not directly share their military information, but they will share it via the U.S. upon their consent, Seoul officials explained. Such an indirect method has been devised apparently in consideration of the public sentiment in the South against any military collaboration with its onetime colonizer.

“If South Korea offers information to the U.S., the U.S. would provide it to Japan upon South Korea’s consent. On the other hand, if Japan offers information to the U.S., the U.S. would give it to the South upon Japan’s consent,” a senior official at the Defense Ministry told reporters, declining to be named.

“The sharing will be limited to information about North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats. The country that has produced a particular piece of information will determine to what extent it will share its information.”

South Korea has been sharing intelligence with the U.S. under a 1987 information-protection pact, while Japan has been sharing information with the U.S. according to a 2007 information-protection pact.

The trilateral arrangement is based on these bilateral pacts that are binding under international law, and would guarantee the protection of any information shared among the three partners, Seoul officials said.

Seoul believes that the trilateral information sharing will enhance the “quality and credibility” of intelligence on North Korea’s military threats.

“Japan has six surveillance satellites, missile detection equipment on their Aegis ships and other intelligence assets that would help us better detect military movements in North Korea,” said the Seoul official.

“If we piece together all of our information, we will be able to more accurately analyze North Korea’s missile movements from all stages ― boost, cruising and terminal. We will also be able to better analyze how North Korea operates its missile force at a tactical level.”

The three countries agreed to discuss the trilateral information sharing in May when their defense chiefs met on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual security forum in Singapore.

Their discussion on the deal came after Pyongyang successfully fired a long-range rocket with an estimated range of 10,000 kilometers in December 2012, and conducted a third nuclear test in February 2013.

Pyongyang has a wide range of missiles that can strike South Korea, Japan and potentially the U.S. mainland.

Its Scud missiles with ranges of between 300 kilometers and 1,000 kilometers are largely targeted at South Korea, while Rodong missiles are aimed at Japan. It also has the Musudan missile with a range of more than 3,000 kilometers.

The North has also been developing intercontinental ballistic missiles such as the Taepodong-2 missile with a range of around 10,000 kilometers, and the KN-08 missile with an estimated range of 12,000 kilometers, which was unveiled in a military parade last year.

The trilateral information cooperation has sparked a controversy here, with some arguing that the deal will bring South Korea closer to its participation in the global U.S.-led missile defense program.

Seoul’s Defense Ministry said that the information sharing does not entail its participation in the U.S. MD program.

It reiterated that it would operate an independent low-tier missile defense program, and that it would only seek intelligence sharing with the U.S.

“The U.S. has its own MD program, and we have our own for which we will independently develop, plan and implement our operational procedures. It is not that we are joining the U.S. MD program,” the official said.

Seoul has been reluctant to join the U.S. MD system as it could cause diplomatic friction with China and Russia that believe the U.S. military program, despite its defensive nature, could potentially target them.

Civic groups have protested the decision over the information sharing, arguing that the deal was signed without seeking domestic public consensus, particularly at a time when Tokyo has failed to fully atone for its wartime atrocities.
 
Called the "Art Of War". It has everything to do with China and less with North Korea.
Deception is the key.
 
Doesn't South Korea hate Japan right now?

Japan and South Korea both are major non NATO allies and i think it has to do more with the Missile Defense Shield in Asia Pacific. Japan has received second Army Navy/Transportable Radar Surveillance system (AN/TPY-2) and there were articles in October 2014 that South Korea might get THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense) interceptors.

eastasiatraced.jpg
 
TASS: World - China hopes pact of US, South Korea, Japan won’t destabilize situation on Korean Peninsula

December 29, 13:40 UTC+3
"We hope that the sides will make more effort to strengthen mutual confidence and will not take actions destabilizing the situation,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said

1076983.jpg


“We see that the situation on the Korean Peninsula is unstable. We hope that the sides will make more effort to strengthen mutual confidence and will not take actions destabilizing the situation,” Chunying said, urging the parties to do everything possible to maintain peace and stability in the region.
 
TASS: World - China hopes pact of US, South Korea, Japan won’t destabilize situation on Korean Peninsula

December 29, 13:40 UTC+3
"We hope that the sides will make more effort to strengthen mutual confidence and will not take actions destabilizing the situation,” China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying said

1076983.jpg


“We see that the situation on the Korean Peninsula is unstable. We hope that the sides will make more effort to strengthen mutual confidence and will not take actions destabilizing the situation,” Chunying said, urging the parties to do everything possible to maintain peace and stability in the region.


Great to hear!
 
'Just for lulz': Hackers leak 13,000 passwords from Amazon, PlayStation, Xbox
Published time: December 27, 2014 14:43

35.si.jpg

Reuters / Pawel Kopczynski

A group, claiming to be affiliated with the hacktivist collective Anonymous, released a file containing 13,000 passwords and usernames along with credit card numbers from popular sites like Amazon and Walmart.

The information was released in a massive text document posted to Ghostbin, a filesharing site on Friday. By Saturday afternoon the document was no longer accessible.

The leaked account information came from several popular sites, including PlayStation Network, Xbox Live, Hulu Plus, in addition to a handful of **** sites. The Daily Dot has published a full list of the nearly 40 websites whose users may be compromised.

For good measure, the group also included a pirated copy of ‘The Interview’, a Kim Jong-un assassination buddy comedy, which gained international relevance during this month’s devastating Sony hack, causing the company to initially pull the film from release.

Anonymous, a loosely organized association of hackers and online activists, has a history of cyberattacks targeting governments, corporations and various organizations. The group is not known for going after individuals at random.

However, because the collective is decentralized, any hacker can ostensibly claim affiliation. The group responsible for Friday’s leak gave no ideological explanation for the hack, tweeting, instead, that it was“just for lulz.”

The odds your account info is among the 13,000 stolen combinations are highly unlikely, tech experts suggest it might be a good idea to update your passwords just in case.

This holiday season has seen several high-profile cyberattacks. On Christmas Day, a hacker group calling itself Lizard Squad shut down several online gaming sites. While last Tuesday, another group, dubbed Gator League, took credit for temporarily taking down the GCHQ site.
 
Between U.S. and China, South Korea in bind over missile defense| Reuters

By Jack Kim

SEOUL Tue Mar 17, 2015 5:27am EDT

(Reuters) - The potential deployment of a sophisticated U.S. air defense system in South Korea to counter the North's missile threat is proving a headache for Seoul as it tries to walk a fine line between its closest security ally Washington and its biggest trade partner China.

Since June, U.S. military officials have said the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system was needed in South Korea given Pyongyang's growing missile arsenal, although there has been no formal proposal from Washington.

While China initially said little about such a deployment, it has begun to express opposition, prompting some lawmakers in Seoul to express concern over the possible fallout on ties. At the same time, other MPs have said basing THAAD batteries in South Korea would strengthen the country's security alliance with Washington.

The wrangle comes as Seoul also debates whether to join a Chinese-led development bank that the United States opposes.

The THAAD system, which is designed to intercept ballistic missiles at high altitude, has radar that can track objects 2,000 km (1,200 miles) away, a range which would include much of the Chinese mainland.

"It is a delicate issue when we look at South Korea-U.S. relations and South Korea-China relations," said a South Korean government official with knowledge of the matter but who declined to be identified. "We are aware of China's concerns."

With the issue dominating headlines in South Korean media, the government has stressed there have been no talks so far with Washington over the system.

"This government's position is 'three No's'," presidential Blue House spokesman Min Kyung-wook told a briefing last week. "There has been no request, so there has been no consultation and therefore there is no decision."

The United States is South Korea's closest ally, and maintains 28,500 military personnel in the country, a legacy of the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended in a truce and left the two Koreas in a technical state of war.

Earlier this month, General Vincent Brooks, head of the U.S. Army Pacific Command, told Reuters that THAAD batteries were urgently needed in South Korea given the willingness of North Korea to use its missile systems.

He told a separate think tank audience in Washington that the increased range and precision of North Korean missiles were "of great concern" and represented a physical threat to U.S. territory.

The THAAD system is built by Lockheed Martin Corp, and costs an estimated 1 trillion won ($885.6 million) apiece. Some THAAD opponents in South Korea propose instead developing an indigenous missile defense system.

THINK TWICE, SAYS CHINA

China's Foreign Ministry said the potential deployment of THAAD batteries "exceeds actual security needs, and will put renewed stress on the already fragile situation on the Korean peninsula".

"We urge the relevant countries to be extra cautious, and think twice before acting," it said in a statement to Reuters. Russia has expressed similar opposition. [ID:nL6N0PZ56M]

China is South Korea's biggest trading partner, with $235.4 billion in two-way trade in 2014 dwarfing the $115.6 billion total with the United States. South Korean President Park Geun-Hye and Chinese President Xi Jinping have forged close ties, holding six summit meetings since both took office in 2013.

Beijing is also North Korea's main ally, although its relations with Pyongyang have cooled.

During a visit to Seoul on Tuesday, the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Daniel Russel, said the U.S. and South Korean militaries have an obligation to protect their citizens.

"I find it curious that a third country would presume to make strong representations about a security system that has not been put in place and that is still a matter of theory," he said.

South Korean Defense Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok said neighboring countries should not try to influence Seoul's security policies.

But another South Korean government official underscored the bind for Seoul, saying: "If the United States wants to deploy (THAAD) as part of its military operation, we're in no position to say they should or shouldn't do it."
 
Russia warns US against sending missile defence system to South Korea | Zee News
Last Updated: Tuesday, March 24, 2015 - 13:27

Moscow: Russia on Tuesday warned the United States against sending a ballistic missile defence system to South Korea, saying it could threaten regional security.


Washington says it wants to deploy the system, known as THAAD, to South Korea as a deterrent to military provocation by North Korea.

"Such a development cannot but cause concern about the destructive influence of the United States` global missile defence on international security," Russia`s foreign ministry said in a statement.

"In a region where the situation is already extremely complicated in terms of security, this could serve as another push toward an arms race in northeast Asia and further complicate any resolution of the nuclear issues on the Korean peninsula," the statement said.

China has also already warned that deployment of the system would undermine peace and stability in the region.

Faced with growing isolation from the West over the Ukraine crisis, Russia has moved to bolster ties with former Cold War-ally North Korea.

Moscow and Pyongyang have named 2015 a "year of friendship" between the two countries and the Kremlin says reclusive leader Kim Jong-Un is set to make his first official trip abroad to visit Russia`s World War Two victory commemoration in May.

South Korea and the United States will launch a massive landing drill March 28 as the climax of an ongoing joint military exercise which North Korea views as an invasion rehearsal.

AFP
 
Sites Survey has been done for Missile Defense shield in South Korea.

Seoul to begin THAAD debate
A vernacular daily said that the USFK carried out a feasibility survey for stationing THAAD early this year at five sites, including Pyeongtaek in Gyeonggi Province, Wonju in Gangwon Province and Busan. A statement released by the USFK said it conducted informal surveys, falling short of confirming the details.

THAAD equipped with e X-Band radar provides coverage over an area of some 600 miles, which would provide detection for missile capabilities inside China.

The THAAD deployment issue is expected to top the agenda when U.S. Secretary of State Kerry and Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter visit Korea in early April.
 
Sites Survey has been done for Missile Defense shield in South Korea.

Seoul to begin THAAD debate
A vernacular daily said that the USFK carried out a feasibility survey for stationing THAAD early this year at five sites, including Pyeongtaek in Gyeonggi Province, Wonju in Gangwon Province and Busan. A statement released by the USFK said it conducted informal surveys, falling short of confirming the details.

THAAD equipped with e X-Band radar provides coverage over an area of some 600 miles, which would provide detection for missile capabilities inside China.

The THAAD deployment issue is expected to top the agenda when U.S. Secretary of State Kerry and Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter visit Korea in early April.


Excellent !
 
In the coming months, South Korea and the United States will discuss the potential deployment of the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense system (a.k.a. THAAD). This system detects incoming missiles and intercepts them at long ranges and high altitudes by using its own hit-to-kill missiles. Think of it as the outer layer in a multi-layered defense system designed to protect South Korea—and the 28,500 U.S. military personnel stationed there—from North Korean missile attacks.

The existing defense in South Korea is a system that integrates Aegis and Patriot systems operated by both countries. While capable, this system lacks the outer layer provided by THAAD, leaving large holes in coverage. If conflict were to occur, military commanders would be forced to prioritize which areas of South Korea to defend. Given this situation, it is easy to see why General Curtis Scaparrotti, the top U.S. commander in Korea, has recommended the deployment of THAAD to his superiors. From the military perspective, it is a prudent step to make the peninsula’s defensive system as complete as possible given the unpredictability of North Korea under Kim Jong-un.

screen%20shot%202015-01-16%20at%201.13.47%20pm.png




img_0170-4.jpg
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom