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Northeast Asia Geostrategic Forum

ROK must realize only talks can make DPRK see value of peace

Source: China Daily Editor Zhang Tao - 2017-03-24

The United States and the Republic of Korea began their annual military exercises, codenamed Key Resolve and Foal Eagle, on the Korea Peninsula earlier this month. Simultaneously, the US has resorted to war rhetoric, fueling concerns over the already volatile situation on the peninsula.

While the Key Resolve is a computer-simulated exercise and will last two weeks, Foal Eagle will continue until April with thousands of US and ROK troops taking part in it, and the scale of the drills is unprecedented.

In a related development, during his first visit to Seoul last week, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the Donald Trump administration will take "a different approach" to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's nuclear issue, stressing that "all options are on table", including military action, though he added that that was not the desired option.

Tillerson's remarks mark a major departure from the decades-old US policy on the DPRK, which has been a combination of containment and on-and-off engagement. The US has used economic sanctions and political pressure in the past in response to the DPRK's nuclear and missile tests. And once the US decides to not tolerate the DPRK's provocations, the Korea Peninsula will be one step closer to war. This scenario will benefit none of the stakeholders in the Asia-Pacific region, as its consequences will be unbearable to all.

As a close neighbor of the DPRK, China has repeatedly urged the other stakeholders to exercise utmost restraint and refrain from making any more reckless moves.

Foreign Minister Wang Yi recently put forward a new proposal to break the impasse on the peninsula. He urged the DPRK to suspend its nuclear and missile programs, while asking the US and the ROK to halt their large-scale military exercises. But, so far, China's suggestion has not elicited any positive response.

Obviously, Washington and Seoul are stuck in a vicious circle-of responding to an arms threat with a counter-threat. The decision to deploy the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-missile system in the ROK is the result of this mindset, and gives the DPRK an excuse to continue pursuing its nuclear and missile programs.

The decision to deploy THAAD has also become a sticking point in Beijing-Seoul relations, as China sees it as a tool to spy on the Chinese territory. And a deterioration in Beijing-Seoul ties serves the interests of neither country and may cast a shadow on East Asia cooperation as well.

China is the ROK's largest trading partner, the largest destination for its overseas investment and its largest source of overseas students. Also, the ROK is one of China's most important partners in investment and trade and people-to-people exchanges. Beijing-Seoul ties are passing through a difficult phase as a result of the ROK agreeing with the US to deploy THAAD disregarding China's genuine concerns and interests.

Many in China also believe THAAD is part of the "pivot" to Asia policy of the previous US administration, which still serves Washington's purpose of hedging against Beijing.

In recent years, the US has strengthened its military alliances in the Asia-Pacific apparently to contain China's rise. And there is little doubt that the US' military alliances with the ROK and Japan have assumed greater importance for implementing its regional strategy.

By deploying the anti-missile system in China's neighborhood, the US can complete the missing link in its global missile defense system as well as contribute to its strategic maneuvering in the Asia-Pacific. What the US allies don't realize is that, after becoming the US' partners in its strategic games, they will have to face the backlash of countries like China and Russia in the region. Seoul's icy relations with Beijing are a case in point.

The onus is on Washington and Seoul to change the situation; they should have faith in negotiation, as it is the only way the DPRK can be made to see the necessity and importance of peace. Using war rhetoric and taking provocative actions will lead us nowhere.


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Little time left to solve Korean Peninsula nuclear issue peacefully

Source China Military Editor Huang Panyue - 2017-03-2

BEIJING, Mar. 22 (ChinaMil) -- The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) announced on March 19 that they had conducted a successful ground test of a new type of high-thrust rocket engine the previous day.

This was widely interpreted as “a great event of historic significance” for the DPRK’s indigenous rocket industry. And the U.S. president Trump responded that “North Korea is behaving very badly”.

Successful ground test of the rocket engine isn't the same thing as a successful launch, and launching the rocket from the launching field isn't the same thing as commissioning it in the troops and then launching the missile.

Even so, there is no denying that DPRK's rocket research and development (R&D) has made constant progress.

Theoretically speaking, Pyongyang will have its own intercontinental ballistic missiles that could hit the United States sooner or later.

We believe that none of the U.S., South Korea or DPRK wants to go to war at this moment as the situation hasn't come to that point yet.

We also believe that warfare is just a matter of time if DPRK continues its nuclear and missile program.

A long-planned surprise attack or an accident could trigger the war. The Korean Peninsula game won't be protracted forever. A final outburst is inevitable.

In no condition will the international community accept DPRK's legal possession of nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles.

As Pyongyang continues with its nuclear programs, international sanctions will get tighter, and it will eventually be isolated from the rest of the world for a long time.

But Pyongyang, which is getting militarily stronger, won't be a sitting duck. It may adopt some dangerous provocative actions that will lead to new confrontations until a war breaks out in the end.

DPRK has made constant progress in nuclear missiles, and the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue is becoming more and more destructive. The longer this crisis drags on, the worse it is for all parties, including the DPRK.

To solve the nuclear crisis on the Korean Peninsula, the key is to force the DPRK to give up nuclear weapons in exchange for its most concerned security, but it seems that joint military exercises held by the U.S. and South Korea are not effective in achieving that goal.

Facts show that the effect of military pressure from those two countries has been exhausted, and more pressure will only get the opposite effect.

Relevant countries should drive home to DPRK the following reasons and logic.

First, even if DPRK has developed intercontinental ballistic missiles in the real sense and put a nuclear warhead on it, it won't form the traditional nuclear deterrence in international relations, and its nuclear forces won't translate into the conditions for political stability and resources for economic and social development.

Second, international sanctions won't be lifted as long as Pyongyang doesn't give up nuclear weapon development, and DPRK will never become a normal member in the international community.

China, the U.S. and Russia don't see eye to eye on many things, but they have the same stance on DPRK's possession of nuclear weapons, so it's impossible for Pyongyang to pit them against each other through diplomatic means and create decisive opportunities for it to break the international sanctions.

Third, Pyongyang may imagine that the U.S. would shudder at its primary nuclear devices, but a large power like the U.S. has more confidence and capability than it thinks.

Once a nuclear war broke out between the two countries, their sufferings would be of completely different nature - the U.S. would sustain physical losses, but DPRK might be wiped off the face of the earth for good.

Therefore, the U.S. will take precautions against DPRK's nuclear missiles, but it won't be afraid of it, let alone make concessions.

Fourth, a voluntary abandonment of nuclear weapons is most conducive to DPRK because in that case, it will still have room for bargaining and obtain the security safeguards it wished through the possession of nuclear weapons.

Nuclear weapon plays the biggest role on the negotiating table, and Pyongyang should take an active part in the negotiations, and get as many interests as possible for the DPRK regime and society in return for giving up its nuclear missile technology to the UN Security Council.

But Pyongyang doesn't trust anyone now, even Beijing has difficulty communicating with it, but they have normal channels of communication at least.

To help Beijing to talk some sense into Pyongyang, the U.S. and South Korea have to adjust their moves and let Pyongyang see that it will have greater security and a brighter future once it gives up its nuclear program.

Washington and Seoul have played the military card for so many years to no avail. It's high time that they change their approach.

China has proposed two-way suspension deal to ease Korean Peninsula tensions. It has remonstrated DPRK, South Korea and the U.S. in earnest in order to properly settle the nuclear crisis on the peninsula.

There isn't as much time left as some imagine to solve the nuclear issue peacefully, perhaps no longer than president Trump's four-year term. All parties should feel a sense of urgency, otherwise we'll have no choice but embrace the devil of war.
 
Park Geun-hye becomes third former South Korean president to be arrested

THE HANKYOREH
Posted on : March 31, 2017 14:55 KST
Modified on : March 31, 2017 14:55 KST

Park_Geun-hye_was_arrested_20170331.jpg

Former President Park Geun-hye is taken by car from the Supreme Prosecutors’ Office in Seoul’s Seocho district to
Seoul Detention Center, early in the morning of Mar. 31. (Yonhap News)

In granting arrest warrant, judge recognizes credibility of bribery charge against Park, and risk of evidence destruction

An arrest warrant for former president Park Geun-hye requested by the Prosecutors’ Special Investigation Headquarters (led by Lee Yeong-ryeol) was issued by a court on Mar. 31. The warrant, which was issued 21 days after the Constitutional Court removed Park from the presidency, is linked to a number of charges against Park, including the acceptance of a 43.3 billion won (US$38.6 million) bribe from Samsung.

Park is the third former president who has been jailed, along with Roh Tae-woo (in office 1988-93) and Chun Doo-hwan (1979-88). While Prosecutors can detain Park for up to 20 days as they carry out their investigation, concerns about the possible influence this could have on the May 9 presidential election will likely lead them to wrap up their investigation and hand the case to the courts before Apr. 17, when the election period officially kicks off.

After questioning Park during the Mar. 30 hearing for the arrest warrant requested by the prosecutors, Kang Bu-yeong, the judge in charge of warrants for the Seoul Central District Court, issued the warrant at 3:03 am on Mar. 31. “Since the main charges have been established and there are concerns about the destruction of evidence, we grant the grounds for detention, its necessity and its significance,” Kang said.

The court appears to have issued the arrest warrant for Park after concluding that the charge of bribery, which is the linchpin of the investigation, has been partially substantiated. During Park’s pre-arrest questioning on Mar. 30, Prosecutors and Park’s attorneys also spent the most time addressing the charges of accepting a bribe. While Park is facing 13 charges, the arguments during the warrant hearing focused on the most severe of them.

Prosecutors managed to back up their charge that Park received 43.3 billion won from Samsung Electronics Vice Chairman Lee Jae-yong in return for helping him inherit management rights over the Samsung Group by providing evidence including the notebook of former Blue House Senior Secretary for Economic Affairs Ahn Jong-beom (who is in jail awaiting trial) and various text messages exchanged by staff at Samsung who were discussing financial support for Choi Sun-sil’s daughter Jung Yu-ra, analysts say.

The court’s decision was particularly influenced by the fact that Lee, who is accused of having given the bribe, is in jail. Observing that the people who gave the bribe and Park’s accomplices, including Choi Sun-sil, were already in jail, Prosecutors stated that fairness required that Park should be detained during their investigation.

Park’s attorneys reportedly countered these claims by arguing that Park did not receive any kind of request from Samsung and that the money that Samsung paid went to the Mir and K-Sports Foundations and to Choi and her daughter Jung, while Park herself did not profit from this in any way. During the warrant hearing, Park is said to have strongly denied the charges against her and to have admitted that she feels she has been wronged.

But the court concluded that Park’s arguments were not persuasive, since the Samsung Group would have had no reason to provide so much assistance to Choi and Jung, who were only private citizens, if they had not received some kind of promise from the president about helping Lee inherit control of the group.

With Park’s arrest marking the apex of the Prosecutors’ investigation, the next question is the direction of its investigation in the future. In order to minimize the political effect on the presidential election, Prosecutors are reportedly very likely to file charges against Park before Apr. 17, which marks the beginning of the official election period. Prosecutors are also likely to speed up their investigation not only of Samsung but of other chaebols, including Lotte and SK, who have come up in the investigation, so that they can make a decision about whether to also charge those companies with giving bribes around the time they file charges against Park. Along with this, they’re also moving forward with their investigation of former Blue House Senior Secretary for Civil Affairs Woo Byung-woo with the aim of not dragging out the investigation.

By Seo Young-ji and Choi Hyun-june, staff reporters

Please direct questions or comments to [english@hani.co.kr]

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/788817.html
 
In order to minimize the political effect on the presidential election, Prosecutors are reportedly very likely to file charges against Park before Apr. 17, which marks the beginning of the official election period. Prosecutors are also likely to speed up their investigation not only of Samsung but of other chaebols, including Lotte and SK, who have come up in the investigation, so that they can make a decision about whether to also charge those companies with giving bribes around the time they file charges against Park.

I would not be surprised if it eventually extended to the THAAD deal.

It is well known that the US has strong control over the iron triangle in Japan and Korea, one of the legs of the triangle being the big business and the other being the bureaucracy.

Add the third leg, media, and you have the perfect recipe for political subjugation to a foreign entity.

China has a very troublesome neighborhood.
 
Park Geun-hye’s political career goes from “election queen” to suspect in jail

THE HANKYOREH
Posted on : April 1, 2017 13:12 KST

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Former president Park Geun-hye is taken by car from Seoul Central District Prosecutors Office to Seoul Detention Center in Uiwang, Gyeonggi Province, in the early morning of Mar. 31. Park is the first South Korean president to be arrested since former presidents Roh Tae-woo and Chun Doo-hwan in 1995. (pool photo)

After being elected as South Korea’s first female leader, Park’s incompetence and corruption led to her downfall

“Only by being a ‘public welfare’ president who always keeps her promises can I usher in the era of national happiness all of you have been waiting for.” (Inaugural address as 18th South Korean president, Feb. 25, 2013)

“I feel dismayed to all of you in the public. I will submit faithfully to being questioned.” (Before being questioned by prosecutors on Mar. 21, 2017)

Four years and three months after being elected, the same Park Geun-hye who vowed before the public to become a “public welfare president” and “a president for unity” was incarcerated on Mar. 31 as a suspect in 13 charges, including bribery. Her dramatic story - a president’s daughter who lost both parents to assassins’ bullets rising to become the first female president and part of the first father-daughter president pair - finally ended in tragedy.

From the time she ventured into the political fray in 1997 until her victory over an opposition party leader to become the first female president, Park was constantly at the center of South Korean politics. Identified with her father Park Chung-hee, she attained legendary status among conservatives. Both admiration and disillusionment toward Park were used as raw material to boost her as an incarnation of her father.

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Park Geun-hye acting as first lady in 1974, after her mother died in an assassination attempt on her father,
former president Park Chung-hee. (Hankyoreh file photo)

Having left the Blue House in 1979 following Park Chung-hee’s assassination, Park Geun-hye entered politics after the Asian financial risis of 1997. Feeling “scared everything the last generation accomplished could go up in smoke,” she made a declaration of support for then Hannara Party (precursor to today’s Liberty Korea Party) candidate Lee Hoi-chang just before the 1997 election and submitted an application to join the local branch in Gumi, her father’s hometown in North Gyeongsang Province. Three years into her first time as a lawmaker, Park was chosen as Hannara Party deputy leader in 2000. Apart from a nine-month period of “straying” with her founding of the Union for the Future Korea in 2002, she was a constant presence at the conservative party’s center. What allowed her to make such a dazzling political debut despite her untested mettle as a politician was, among other factors, nostalgia for Park Chung-hee among the industrialization generation, local Daegu-North Gyeongsang sentiments, and strong anti-Communist leanings.

Park ended up playing a pivotal role as “relief pitcher” in 2004, when the Hannara Party found itself in a crisis of the “cash truck” illegal political slush fund scandal and a backlash over the impeachment of then-President Roh Moo-hyun (2003-2008). Having emerged as party leader, she went to make use of an unheard-of “tent party headquarters” strategy to help it win 121 seats in a general election when it was expected to get fewer than 50. For the two years and three months until she stepped down as party leader in June 2006, the party racked up a 40-to-zero record against the ruling party in local and by-elections, earning Park the nickname of “election queen.” On May 20, 2006, she was attacked at Seoul’s Sinchon Rotary while stumping for a local election, suffering an 11-cm gash to her right cheek. Her response - asking “What about [the election situation in] Daejeon?” from her hospital bed - became famous. She also described the rest of her life after the attack as a “second, bonus life.”

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Park Geun-hye after having her face slashed in an attack during a local election campaign, in front of Hyundai Department Store in Seoul, May 20, 2006. At the time Park was leader of the Hannara Party (precursor of today’s Liberty Korea Party). (Hankyoreh file photo)

On the basis of her successes as party leader, Park emerged as a strong presidential candidate. In 2007, she ran as a candidate in the Hannara Party presidential primary against Lee Myung-bak, but lost. At the time, she declared that she would “cleanly accept” the primary outcome, leading many to praise her for committing herself to a run in the next election. But conflicts with Lee’s side escalated as soon as he took office. In Apr. 2008, lawmaker Kim Moo-sung and a number of other pro-Park lawmakers were sidestepped in nominations for the general election. “I was deceived, and the people were deceived,” Park said at the time. Frictions between Lee and Park reached their zenith with the 2009-10 controversy over amending the Sejong Administrative City plan. Park got Lee’s push to amend the plan voted down, delivering her first opposition speech since entering politics. The move established her as a “principled and trustworthy” politician and won her sympathies in the Chungcheong region (where Sejong is located).

Having established strong leadership of the ruling party’s “in-house opposition,” Park once again took the mound as party relief pitcher in Dec. 2011. The Hannara Party was in crisis after the defeat of a vote in August for free school lunches in Seoul and a loss that October in the Seoul mayoral by-election. The party rule of then-leader Hong Joon-pyo was brought down by a scandal over a DDoS cyberattack against the National Election Commission - allowing Park to take center stage as head of the party’s “emergency countermeasures committee.” In addition to attempting to broaden the party’s reach by enlisting outside figures like progressive-leaning Kim Jong-in, Lee Sang-don, and Lee Jun-seok, Park also renamed it the Saenuri Party and changed its official color from blue to red. References to “economic democratization” and “welfare” were added to the party charter. The attempt to rebrand as something different from the Hannara Party was successful, and in the Apr. 2012 general election the Saenuri Party won a majority of 152 seats, beating back an opposition rallied behind the United Democratic Party (precursor to today’s Minjoo Party). Park also placed an overwhelming first with 84% of the votes in the party presidential primary, cementing her as the Saenuri candidate. In the presidential election that December, she defeated UDP candidate Moon Jae-in with 51.7% of the vote to become South Korea’s first female president.

But after she took office, Park’s incompetence began to show: numerous appointment disasters, accusations of “uncommunicativeness,” botched responses to the 2014 Sewol ferry sinking and 2015 MERS outbreak. Midway through her term, she began butting heads with the party’s non-Park leadership, including former party leader Kim Moo-sung and former floor leader Yoo Seong-min. Fears of turning into a “lame duck” prompted her to go wild, leading the way in dividing the public with unilateral decisions on hotly contested issues: state designation of history textbooks, an agreement with the Japanese government on the Japanese military comfort women issue on Dec. 28, 2015, closure of the Kaesong Industrial Complex, and deployment of a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system.

Park_Geun-hye_enters_Seoul_Central_District_Cour.jpg

Park Geun-hye enters Seoul Central District Court to wait for a decision on whether to grant Prosecutors’ request for
a warrant for her arrest and detention, Mar. 30. (Yonhap News)

Her traditional support base of Daegu/North Gyeongsang residents and seniors over 60 continued to support her - but when the Choi Sun-sil government interference scandal broke in fall 2016, the shock waves sent Park’s support ratings plunging below 5%. As layer after layer of the scandal was pulled back, the South Korean public was left aghast. Under pressure from millions of candle-holding demonstrators, the National Assembly voted to impeach Park on Dec. 10 of last year. Ninety-two days later on Mar. 10, the Constitutional Court ruled to remove Park from office. From there, things proceeded rapidly: questioning by prosecutors on Mar. 21, an arrest warrant request on Mar. 27, and a warrant validity review on Mar. 30. On the morning of Mar. 30, a stone-faced Park entered the Seoul Central District Court building. She never got to return to her home in Seoul.

By Choi Hye-jung, staff reporter

Please direct questions or comments to [english@hani.co.kr]

http://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_national/788903.html
 
Here's a bilingual (CN-EN) program by CCTV, this segment highlights upping the ante among the players: the puppet master and puppets in the Korean Peninsula, a tension that is maintained and gradually built over decades to reach its current dangerous level. The segment also flashes back to the past to capture the entire plot in setting up the stage over years or even decades... an interesting watch :coffee:

Cui bono? For whose benefit?

[Chinese Perspective] 《深度国际》 The heightened tensions in the Korean Peninsula 20170328



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Here are few captures to get some idea on how the jail cell (of 10.57 square meter) for the former President Park Geun-hye looks like.

Park_Geun-hye_arrested.jpg

Park_Geun-hye_jail_cell.jpg

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Two former South Korean presidents also jailed in the past: Roh Tae-woo (in office 1988-93) and Chun Doo-hwan (1979-88)

More at below:

[Asia Today] 《今日亚洲》 20170401 (in CN)
 
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China, Japan, ROK hold 12th round of free trade talks
Xinhua, April 14, 2017

Top negotiators from China, Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) met Thursday on pushing forward trade in goods and services as well as investment at the 12th round of talks on a trilateral free trade agreement (FTA).

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Wang Shouwen (L), Chinese vice minister of commerce, Keiichi Katakami (C), Japan's deputy minister for foreign affairs, Lee Sang-jin, assistant minister of Republic of Korea Ministry of Trade, shake hands during the 12th round of talks on a trilateral free trade agreement in Tokyo, Japan, April 13, 2017. [Photo/Xinhua]

Wang Shouwen, Chinese vice minister of commerce, said at the meeting that while global economy is facing a slowdown and uncertain future, and world trade and investment are encountering impediments, China's economic growth in the past decade underscores the fact that global trade has played and will continue to play a key role in driving the world economy.

Wang said that if China, Japan and ROK could make substantial headways in the FTA talks, it will send a positive signal to the world on anti-protectionism and safeguarding economic globalization.

The experiences gained from the talks on the trilateral FTA will also contribute to the negotiations on the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), the Chinese vice minister said.

Keiichi Katakami, Japan's deputy minister for foreign affairs, and Lee Sang-jin, assistant minister of ROK Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy, attended the meeting.

Trilateral talks on China-Japan-ROK FTA, launched in November 2012, were aimed at forging a comprehensive, high-level and mutually beneficial free trade agreement with unique values.

***

Come, make the world's top three largest free trade area with some 17-18 trillion USD combined GDP.

@Shotgunner51
 
Taiwan veteran finds long lost family in Sichuan
chinadaily.com.cn | 2017-04-12 11:11

More than 70 years ago, 20-year-old Hu Dingyuan was recruited into the army to fight China's War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression (1931-1945) and left his home in Sichuan province. Hu ended up in Taiwan and never got back to his home again.

Last month, Hu's information was published by Toutiao, a popular news app, to help him find his family on the mainland. With help from social media users and traditional media, it was discovered that Hejiang county in Sichuan's Luzhou city was likely to be Hu's hometown. Meanwhile a villager from Hejiang county named Li Jiayou said one of his uncles had gone missing at a young age.


Li Jiayou (right) waits for a video call from Hu Dingyuan at his home in Hejiang county, Sichuan province on April 11, 2017. The two sides later confirmed that Hu is Li's missing uncle after checking various details.[Photo/VCG]


Li Jiayou (second from left) and his two brothers, Li Guanmin (left) and Li Shuisheng (third from left) talk with their uncle Hu Dingyuan on a video call on April 11, 2017. [Photo/VCG]


Li Jiayou (second from left) and his two brothers, Li Guanmin (left) and Li Shuisheng (third from left) talk with their uncle Hu Dingyuan on a video call on April 11, 2017. [Photo/VCG]

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Li jiayou and his relatives talk to Hu Dingyuan on a video call on April 11, 2017. [Photo/VCG]



The tomb of Hu Dingyuan's mother in Hejiang county, Luzhou city, Sichuan province. [Photo/VCG]
 
97-year-old Taiwan-based veteran returns to mainland hometown after 77 years
Ecns.cn | 2017-04-20


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Hu Dingyuan, 97, is greeted after he arrives at the Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport in Chengdu city, the capital of Southwest China's Sichuan province, April 19, 2017. Cheng fought in the war against the aggression of Japanese forces and then in 1946 went to Taiwan as the Kuomintang forces retreated from the mainland to the island. He has never been back to his hometown in Luzhou City, Sichuan, in 77 years. In early March, his granddaughter sought help online to find relatives on the mainland. With the help of many people, Hu was able to return to Sichuan and will meet more than 80 family members, including three nephews. [Photo/VCG]

f8bc126e4b231a62abe402.jpg

Hu Dingyuan, 97, is greeted after he arrives at the Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport in Chengdu city, the capital of Southwest China's Sichuan province, April 19, 2017. Cheng fought in the war against the aggression of Japanese forces and then in 1946 went to Taiwan as the Kuomintang forces retreated from the mainland to the island. He has never been back to his hometown in Luzhou City, Sichuan, in 77 years. In early March, his granddaughter sought help online to find relatives on the mainland. With the help of many people, Hu was able to return to Sichuan and will meet more than 80 family members, including three nephews. [Photo/VCG]

f8bc126e4b231a62abe403.jpg

Hu Dingyuan, 97, is greeted after he arrives at the Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport in Chengdu city, the capital of Southwest China's Sichuan province, April 19, 2017. Cheng fought in the war against the aggression of Japanese forces and then in 1946 went to Taiwan as the Kuomintang forces retreated from the mainland to the island. He has never been back to his hometown in Luzhou City, Sichuan, in 77 years. In early March, his granddaughter sought help online to find relatives on the mainland. With the help of many people, Hu was able to return to Sichuan and will meet more than 80 family members, including three nephews. [Photo/VCG]


Hu Dingyuan, 97, is greeted after he arrives at the Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport in Chengdu city, the capital of Southwest China's Sichuan province, April 19, 2017. Cheng fought in the war against the aggression of Japanese forces and then in 1946 went to Taiwan as the Kuomintang forces retreated from the mainland to the island. He has never been back to his hometown in Luzhou City, Sichuan, in 77 years. In early March, his granddaughter sought help online to find relatives on the mainland. With the help of many people, Hu was able to return to Sichuan and will meet more than 80 family members, including three nephews. [Photo/VCG]
 
Ri Ben Gui Zi 日本鬼子

'Cartoon campaign' to erase old scars of Japanese brutality finds lukewarm success in China

People's Daily Online - April 24, 2017

Ri_Ben_Gui_Zi_FOREIGN201704241652000483925054510.jpg

A screen grab of a viral Twitter post by Japanese user @FGO424

Japanese netizens have invented a number of cartoon characters and named them "Ri Ben Gui Zi," 日本鬼子 a term Chinese people have used since the early 1900s to refer to brutal Japanese soldiers invading China. The campaign aims to replace the violent images that turn up in search results for "Ri Ben Gui Zi" 日本鬼子 with their own cartoon characters, and let the painful history gradually be forgotten.

A viral Twitter post by Japanese user @FGO424 revealed how Japanese netizens came up with the plan to alter the connotation of “Ri Ben Gui Zi,” 日本鬼子 literally meaning “Japanese devils” in Chinese. Since 2010, Japanese web users have been trying to use cartoons to "mesmerize the Chinese people,” ultimately imbuing the term with new meaning.

"Usually when you search the term, search engines turn up images of anti-Japanese protests or bloody scenes. But what would happen if they instead showed pages of a super cute cartoons? Would people laugh and be enchanted by it?” a post wondered.

Ri_Ben_Gui_Zi_FOREIGN201704241653000424642632348.jpg

The chosen cartoon image of Ri Ben Gui Zi 日本鬼子

Netizens later designed and uploaded a variety of images. In the end, they voted for the “most adorable” one: a cartoon girl. On Nov. 1, 2010, the chosen image even had a Wikipedia page established on its behalf.

These endeavors seemed to have had an effect. Chinese editors from Guancha.com recently typed the term into both Google and a Japanese version of Yahoo. The cartoon took up half the results on Google's first page, and almost the entire first page on the Japanese site.

Ri_Ben_Gui_Zi_FOREIGN201704241654000496874717690.jpg

The cartoon took up half the results on Google's first page

But Chinese people have taken a skeptical approach to the matter.

The results in search engines might change, but history remains the same, and we will never forget it," one online comment read.

Another netizen advised, “Instead of attempting to blur the vision of the Chinese people, the Japanese would do better to face the past.

The First Sino-Japanese War took place between China's Qing Dynasty and the Empire of Japan from 1894 to 1895. The Second Sino-Japanese War, between the Republic of China and the Empire of Japan, took place between 1937 and 1945, becoming part of World War II in 1941.

http://en.people.cn/n3/2017/0424/c90000-9206954.html
 
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Chinese Foreign Minister Discusses Korean Crisis With Japanese Counterpart

© AP Photo/ Lee Jin-man

Chinese Foreign Minister has discussed the tensions on the Korean Peninsula with his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida in New York, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement Saturday.


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Japan Hopes Russia, China to Help Settle North Korea Nuclear Issue

BEIJING (Sputnik) — Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has discussed the tensions on the Korean Peninsula as well as the prospects of bilateral relations' development with his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida in New York, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said in a statement Saturday.

“The sides [Japanese and Chinese foreign ministers] have… discussed nuclear problem of the Korean peninsula,” the statement issued following the talks read.

The foreign ministers agreed to improve the bilateral relations in the sphere of economic cooperation as well as to maintain contacts on the highest level, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

The statement reminded that Beijing and Tokyo this year celebrate the 45th anniversary of normalization of diplomatic relations as well as 40 years since the conclusion of the bilateral agreement on peace and friendship.

The situation on the Korean peninsula became especially tense during recent months since North Korea carried out a series of missile launches and nuclear tests in violation of the UN Security Council resolutions.

North Korea is believed to have launched a KN-17 intermediate ballistic missile in the early hours of Saturday from a site north of Pyongyang. Japan, South Korea and the United States said the test appeared to have failed after the missile broke up within North Korean territory.

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Chinese FM stresses two directions in dealing with nuclear issue on Korean Peninsula
Xinhua | Updated: 2017-04-29

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Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi (middle, front) speaks during a ministerial meeting of the UN Security Council on the nuclear issue of the Korean Peninsular, at the UN headquarters in New York April 28, 2017.[Photo/Xinhua]


UNITED NATIONS - Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Friday stressed two directions in dealing with the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula, at the UN Security Council Ministerial Meeting on the Non-Proliferation/the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).

Addressing the meeting, Wang said that "we must stay committed to the goal of denuclearization."

"All parties should comprehensively understand and fully implement DPRK-related Security Council resolutions," he said.

The foreign minister said that denuclearization is the basic precondition for long-term peace and stability on the peninsula and "what we must accomplish to safeguard the international nuclear non-proliferation regime."

The Security Council held a special meeting Friday to discuss the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres briefed the meeting, which was chaired by US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, whose country holds the rotating presidency of the Security Council this month.

Wang and foreign ministers or vice foreign ministers of Britain, Russia, Senegal and Japan, attended the meeting.

"The continued escalation of tensions on the Korean Peninsula in the recent period has caused widespread concerns and worries of the international community," said Wang.

"If the issue of the Peninsula fails to be put under effective control and in the case of unexpected events, the situation is highly likely to take a drastic turn for the worse and spiral out of control," he added.

All the 15 members of the Security Council addressed the Security Council focusing on the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula and the implementation of relevant UN resolutions.

South Korean media said that on Saturday morning, the DPRK testfired a mid-range ballistic missile that apparently failed shortly after launch.

At the UN Security Council special meeting, Wang stressed in his address the significance of continued commitment to dialogue and negotiation on the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula.

"We must stay committed to the path of dialogue and negotiation," the Chinese foreign minister said.

"The use of force does not resolve differences, and will only lead to bigger disasters," Wang noted, adding that "as the only way out, dialogue and negotiation also represent the sensible choice for all parties."

"Our past experience of resolving the nuclear issue on the Peninsula shows, whenever dialogue and negotiation were ongoing, the situation on the Peninsula would maintain basic stability and efforts toward denuclearization could make progress," said the minister.

He recalled the five years between 2003 and 2007 when the parties were engaged in dialogue and negotiation, and three joint documents were adopted, noting "In particular, the September 19th Joint Statement in 2005 set out the roadmap for the DPRK's abandonment of all nuclear programs and the realization of peace on the Peninsula."

"Even today, the Joint Statement still carries major positive significance, and has been reaffirmed and acknowledged by all DPRK-related resolutions of the Security Council," Wang said.

Noting that China is not a focal point of the problem on the Peninsula, Wang noted that "the key to solving the nuclear issue on the Peninsula does not lie in the hands of the Chinese side."

"China has over the years made unremitting efforts and played a unique role in promoting a negotiated solution of the issue," said Wang, adding that "it was through China's efforts and the support of all parties that the Three-Party Talks on the Peninsula nuclear issue was expanded to the Six-Party Talks."

"Under the current circumstances, China is still prepared to work with all parties to make new contributions to the resolution of the nuclear issue on the Peninsula," the minister stressed.

In his address to the meeting, Guterres warned that armed conflict in Northeast Asia "would have global ramifications."

"We must act now to prevent conflict and achieve sustainable peace," he told the open meeting.

Guterres condemned "in the strongest terms" the repeated violations of the relevant Security Council resolutions by the DPRK.

Echoing the UN chief, the Chinese foreign minister said that "we urge the DPRK to stop its nuclear and missile development activities, come back to its commitment of denuclearization and honor its denuclearization obligations."

The minister also called on all parties to remain calm and exercise restraint and avoid provocative rhetoric or actions that would lead to miscalculation.

Tillerson opened the meeting with a statement calling on all member states to enforce the existing sanctions, halt or downgrade diplomatic relations with the DPRK, and increase the country's isolation with new sanctions and with a tightening of existing measures.

He said that all options would remain on the table to counter the DPRK action with military action if necessary.

On Saturday, the DPRK test-fired a ballistic missile, which exploded shortly after liftoff, according to Yonhap news agency of the Republic of Korea.

It conducted a hydrogen bomb test and a nuclear warhead explosion test on Jan. 6 and Sept. 9 of 2016, respectively. The Security Council adopted resolutions on March 2 and Nov. 30 of 2016, respectively, demanding that the DPRK abandon its nuclear weapon and missile programs and imposing sanctions on it.

@samsara , @terranMarine , @Dungeness
 
Large US-ROK live fire demonstration on April 26th.

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POCHEON, Gyeonggi Province, April 26 (Yonhap) -- Two AH-64E Apache Guardian attack helicopters from the South Korean Army fired aerial rockets and ammunitions from chain guns at mock targets, as four M1A2 Bradley fighting vehicles from the United States streamed down mountain roads firing artillery rounds.

The powerful show of force was followed by firing the U.S. M270 Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS), rarely open to the public, in one of the largest integrated live-fire exercises of the allies in recent years.

The booms of gunnery echoed through the hills filled with plumes of smoke from explosions near the tense inter-Korean border.

Apaches and the MLRS are known as the allied armies' weapons most feared by North Korea.

Staged at a training range in Pocheon, Gyeonggi Province, on Wednesday, the spectacular display of firepower involved more than 2,000 South Korean and American troops.

It featured around 30 fighter jets, 90 battle tanks and armored vehicles, 30 choppers and 100 heavy guns, according to the Ministry of National Defense.

"I think it's absolutely amazing. I was able to work with the ROK Army and be on the same page," 1st Lt. Steven Porter of the 2nd Infantry Division's 66th Armored Regiment said in an interview. ROK is the acronym for South Korea's official name, the Republic of Korea.

He added it's a "very important exercise" to help keep the allies ready to "fight tonight" and see how they will be working together in actual combat.

It came amid increased tensions on the Korean Peninsula, with the Kim Jong-un regime ratcheting up military threats and the Trump administration taking a tough line against Pyongyang.

The North had its own massive live-fire artillery drill Tuesday in the vicinity of the eastern border with the South, commemorating the founding anniversary of its armed forces.

Earlier this month, the North showed off its major weaponry in a parade in Pyongyang presided over by leader Kim Jong-un.

The 45-minute war games-style exercise of South Korea and the U.S. opened under a scenario of North blitzkrieg attacks on five South Korean guard posts.

It took place at Seungjin Fire Training Field in Pocheon, some 30 kilometers south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) dividing the two Koreas technically still at war.

South Korean K-55 and K-9 155-mm self-propelled howitzers, together with its 130-mm multiple rocket launchers, were the first to respond.

Their artillery shells never missed the mock target just right of the No. 9 mark in the vast firing range.

After that, three F-15K and three FA-50 fighters dropped bombs at mock enemy missile bases detected by drones and RF-16 reconnaissance aircraft.

The next victims were mock Northern mechanized units.

Four A-10 Thunderbolt attack planes and four AH-64D Apache Longbows of the U.S. military, both nicknamed "tank-killers," bombarded tank-shaped targets on hillsides with live rounds, joined by K-2 Black Panther and K1A2 battle tanks on the ground, a dramatic scene witnessed from a distance by Acting President Hwang Kyo-ahn, Defense Minister Han Min-koo, thousands of local residents and a host of reporters and TV crew.

It's just a preview of the firepower that North Korean troops would face heading south in an invasion, South Korean military officials said.

The allied forces were also quick in launching a simulated mechanized assault deep into North Korea's territory.

In the maneuver, South Korea's own Apache helicopters made their public debut.

Hovering above the training ground, two AH-64E Guardians, supported by six AH-1S Cobra copters, pounded targets about 1.2 kilometers ahead with rockets and ammunition, although more powerful Hellfire missiles were not used.

It marked the first time for their live-fire practice to be shown to the public.

The latest upgraded Apache model is one of the South Korean Army's iconic newly acquired weapons along with the indigenous K-239 Chunmoo artillery rocket system, known as K-MLRS.

The Army created two Apache battalions, composed of a total of 36 choppers, late last year.

"We are in the process of training pilots. Our new Apache helicopters will be put into full service in the latter half of this year," the Army said.

U.S. Forces Korea has also deployed 38 AH-64D Apache Longbow helicopters on the peninsula.

The war game was crowned by an infiltration into the heart of the enemy by a unit of commandos rappelling to the ground from two KUH-1 Surion transport helicopters.

Soon afterward, green-colored flares erupted, signaling mission accomplished.

"This exercise was a good opportunity to reinforce the capability for South Korea-U.S. combined operations," said Lt. Col. Chung Seung-ho, commander of the 5th Corp.'s artillery battery. "Based on the robust joint defense posture, our military will continue to thoroughly defend South Korea from any attack."

Meanwhile, a bevy of major heavy weapons were on display at the training site, including the Paladin M109A6 artillery system and ARTHUR-K counter-battery radar.
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http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/feature/2017/04/26/90/0900000000AEN20170426003000315F.html

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Two month long Foal Eagle exercise wraps up.

Seoul and Washington complete their Foal Eagle exercise on Sunday.
The 2-month-long annual joint military drill involved some 300-thousand South Korean soldiers and 10-thousand U.S. troops.
Though it is purely defensive in nature, tension mounts during the combined training as Pyongyang perceives it as a preparation for an invasion.
The U.S. aircraft carrier Carl Vinson meanwhile, is still taking part in a different joint exercise with the Korean navy that began on Saturday... expected to end some time this week.
The Nimitz-class supercarrier that took part in drills last month and had left the area, but was called back, seemingly in response to North Korean provocations.


U.S. 7TH FLEET AREA OF OPERATIONS (March 22, 2017) U.S. and Republic of Korea navy vessels participate in a photo exercise during Foal Eagle. The Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group is on a scheduled deployment in the western Pacific as part of the U.S. Pacific Fleet-led initiative to extend the command and control functions of U.S. 3rd Fleet. U.S. Navy aircraft carrier strike groups have patrolled the Indo-Asia-Pacific regularly and routinely for more than 70 years. (U.S. Navy video by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Devin M. Monroe/Released)
 
U.S. 7TH FLEET AREA OF OPERATIONS (April 25, 2017) The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Wayne E. Meyer (DDG 108) is underway alongside the Republic of Korea multirole guided-missile destroyer Wang Geon (DDG 978) during a bilateral exercise. Wayne E. Meyer is on a scheduled western Pacific deployment with the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group. U.S. Navy aircraft carrier strike groups have patrolled the Indo-Asia-Pacific regularly and routinely for more than 70 years. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Kelsey L. Adams/Released)
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http://www.navy.mil/view_image.asp?id=235924

THAAD now operational although both sides are having an argument as to who pays for the deployment.

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The U.S. military's THAAD anti-missile system is now operational in South Korea, according to U.S. officials. The system's deployment to defend against a North Korean missile threat has become an issue in the South Korea's upcoming presidential election and with China, which is concerned that the system's long-range radar could track Chinese missile systems.

The Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) is an advanced defensive anti-missile system that incorporates a long-range radar used to track incoming ballistic missiles in their terminal phase of flight.

The system consists of multiple missile batteries coordinated by a radar and tracking system. While now initially operationally capable it will not be fully operational for a few months.

What you need to know about the missile defense system US is setting up in S. Korea
The system's deployment to South Korea was agreed to in July of last year, but the initial components of the THAAD system did not arrive in South Korea until the first week in March. The arrival coincided with a North Korea's launch of multiple ballistic missiles.

The system's deployment is receiving a mixed response in South Korea. Early last week protesters greeted the system's components as they arrived at its operational location, a former golf course, located 130 miles southeast of Seoul.

On Wednesday Adm. Harry Harris, the commander of U.S. Pacific Command told Congress last week that the system would be operational "in coming days".

The anti-missile system has also become an issue in South Korea's presidential election being held on May 9.

Moon Jae-in, the leading presidential candidate, has criticized the THAAD deployment and believes that it should be up to a new administration to decide whether the system should be deployed.

The United States has maintained that the system is purely defensive, but China has criticized the system's radar as a potential hedge to its ballistic missile development. China has placed sanctions on major South Korean businesses to show its disapproval of the system's deployment.

"I find it preposterous that China would try to influence South Korea to not get a weapon's system that's completely defensive against the very country that's allied with China," Admiral Harris told a House panel last week. "If China wants to do something constructive then they ought to focus less, in my opinion, on South Korea's defensive preparations focus instead more on North Korea's offensive preparations."

To that end, Harris told the same panel that he is encouraged by recent Chinese efforts to influence North Korea. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said last week that China has warned North Korea it will impose sanctions if it conducts another underground nuclear test.

The THAAD missile system will add another layer of anti-missile defense for South Korea. The U.S. military and South Korea both have Patriot anti-missile batteries that can defend against short range missiles.

Last week President Trump mentioned in an interview that it would be appropriate for South Korea to pay for the system's deployment. "It's a billion dollar system," he told Reuters.

Lieutenant General H.R. McMaster, the national security adviser, told Fox News on Sunday that the United States would adhere to the agreed upon terms of the missile's deployment.

"But what the president has asked us to do is to look across all of our alliances and to have appropriate burden-sharing, responsibility-sharing," said McMaster. "We are looking at that with a great ally, South Korea. "

"The question of what is the relationship on THAAD, on our defense relationship going forward, will be renegotiated as it's going to be with all of our allies' said McMaster.
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http://abcnews.go.com/US/thaad-anti-missile-system-operational-south-korea/story?id=47137843
 
Provocations push tensions to the brink
chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-04-30

Hours after a United Nations Security Council meeting on the Korean Peninsula's nuclear issue, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea reportedly test-fired a ballistic missile on Saturday, which exploded after liftoff.

Pyongyang's repeated testing of the international community's patience will lead to severe consequences that will increasingly be hard for it to swallow.

Its blatant violation of Security Council resolutions constitutes an act of open defiance to the international community's resolve to denuclearize the peninsula and points to the urgency of tackling both the symptoms and the root cause of the issue.

A vicious circle of provocation and retaliation has reigned in recent months, with Pyongyang pushing its nuclear and missile programs while the United States and the Republic of Korea resorting to massive military exercises and the deployment of an advanced US missile defense system in the ROK.

As a result, the degree of distrust and enmity has reached the highest it's been in years between the contested parties on the peninsula. One miscalculation and one misstep would easily push the two sides, separated by the Demilitarized Zone, to the brink of war.

At this stage, both sides should exercise utmost restraint because a head-on clash, even if a limited one, would lead to a costly price that neither side could afford to pay. Before diplomatic means are exhausted, those who have a penchant of trumpeting war rhetoric are being neither responsible to themselves nor others.

Pyongyang should awaken from the fantasy that its pursuit of nuclear capabilities and a missile program will bring it peace and security, as it has left the world community little choices but to tighten nonmilitary measures to rein in its dangerous ambition.

The country should know it is playing a dangerous and counterproductive game of provocation, which can backfire and reduce the chance for diplomatic mediation. In fact, its constant and escalating provocations have eroded the patience of stakeholders on the peninsula to defuse tensions through peaceful means.

Meanwhile, the US and ROK also need to do their part, and stop military threats and deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, which is the practical way to mitigate distrust and defuse tensions so as to create the conditions for communication and dialogue.

Yet, as Foreign Minister Wang Yi pointed out in the UN Security Council meeting, no matter what happens, we should never waiver in our commitment to the goal of denuclearization.

A nuclear-free Korean Peninsula is the basic precondition for its long-term peace and stability, which caters to the interests of all parties as it is the only way to dispel reasonable concerns of all stakeholders, including DPRK and ROK, and this should be the right direction for all parties to strive for.
 
Russia backs China's "double suspension" proposal on Korean Peninsula

Xinhua - 2017-04-30

Russia backs China's proposal on the suspension of missile and nuclear tests by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) and of joint military drills by the United States and South Korea at the UN Security Council, the Russian Foreign Ministry said Saturday.

"During a broad discussion, members of the council (UNSC) unanimously called upon the DPRK to renounce missile and nuclear tests and implement relevant UNSC resolutions," the ministry said in a statement following an open ministerial meeting on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue held by the UNSC Friday.

The UNSC also called for "a political and diplomatic solution" to the issue during the meeting, the statement added.

"In this context, the Russian Federation supports China's proposal for a 'double suspension' (the suspension of Pyongyang's missile and nuclear tests in exchange for the suspension of US-South Korean military drills near the DPRK) as a starting point for political negotiations," the ministry said.

Nevertheless, no common solution was made at Friday's meeting, according to the statement.

Last month, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said China proposed a dual-track approach of denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula, namely the "double suspension" initiative, in an attempt to help the parties break out of the current security dilemma and return to the negotiating table.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1044682.shtml

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Russia backs China’s call to stop N. Korea nuke tests in exchange for halt in US-S. Korea drills

Published time: 29 Apr, 2017 11:09
Edited time: 30 Apr, 2017 16:39

Russia has supported a Chinese initiative in the UNSC intended to stabilize the situation on the Korean peninsula. It calls on the North to refrain from missile and nuclear testing, while the US and South Korea should halt military drills in the area.

“Members of the [UN] Security Council have unanimously called upon DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea] to stop missile and nuclear tests and to fulfil UNSC resolutions,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Saturday following a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) session held in New York earlier on Friday.

The UNSC called for a political and diplomatic solution to the nuclear crisis on the Korean Peninsula, the ministry added.

“In this context, the Russian Federation supported a Chinese proposal for a ‘double suspension(Pyongyang is to stop missile and nuclear tests and the US and South Korean militaries are to halt drills near North Korea) as a starting point for political negotiations.”

However, the council was not able to agree on a common solution, the ministry added.

The UNSC session was joined by Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov, who urged Washington and Seoul to reconsider their decision to station a THAAD anti-missile system on the Korean Peninsula, warning that it will serve as a “destabilizing factor” in the region.

Gatilov said the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) had been deployed in line with the vicious logic of creating a global missile shield,” while warning that it is also undermining the security and deterrent capacities of adjacent states, such as China, thus threatening “the existing military balance in the region.”

READ MORE: ‘Destabilizing factor’: Russia urges US, S. Korea to reconsider THAAD anti-missiles deployment

“It is not only we who perceived this step very negatively. We are once again urging both the United States and the Republic of Korea to reconsider its expediency, and other regional states not to yield to the temptation of joining such destabilizing efforts,” the deputy foreign minister said.


Ahead of the UNSC session, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told reporters that a peaceful solution to the Korean crisis is the “only right choice.”

“Peaceful settlement of the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula through dialogue and negotiations represents the only right choice that is practical and viable,” Wang said.

Meanwhile, speaking before the UN Security council, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson threatened to suspend diplomatic relations and impose additional sanctions affecting third parties dealing with North Korea unless Pyongyang abandons its nuclear weapons program, adding that “all options for responding to future provocations must remain on the table,” including military action.

“Diplomatic and financial levers of power will be backed up by a willingness to counteract North Korean aggression with military action if necessary,” he said at UNSC.

On Friday, Pyongyang test fired a ballistic missile that appears to have exploded within minutes of launching without ever actually leaving North Korean airspace, according to the US Pacific Command and South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The reported missile test came amid rising tensions in the region, where the US is building up its military presence in response to an alleged North Korean “nuclear threat.”

Reacting to the news, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the recent ballistic missile launch was a “grave threat” to Japan.

“Despite strong warnings by the international community, North Korea today went through its ballistic missile launch. It is a grave threat to our country. This is absolutely not acceptable. We strongly condemn such acts,” Abe said on Saturday.

A previous missile launch on April 16, a day after a huge military parade in Pyongyang, also ended in failure, according to Washington and Seoul.

In an attempt to deter North Korea from conducting more nuclear and missile tests, the US has sent a group of American warships to the region led by an aircraft carrier. North Korea has also recently conducted large-scale, live-fire exercises on its eastern coast, just as the US and South Korea were engaged in their annual war games.

https://www.rt.com/news/386559-north-korea-unsc-russia-china/
 
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