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N. Korea denounces S. Korea-Japan military talks

S. Korea boosts reserve troop training: report
Seoul (AFP) Jan 16, 2011 - South Korea's reserve troops will stage their first battlefront practice during military drills with the United States, a report said Sunday, as Seoul beefs up deterrence against North Korean threats. Cross-border tension has been acute since the North's deadly shelling of a border island in November that killed four South Koreans, including two civilians. In the wake of Pyongyang's first attack on a civilian area since the 1950-53 Korean War, Seoul has staged a flurry of military exercises, including one with the United States, in a show of force.

Two battalions of the reserve forces will join joint drills planned with the US in March and August, the Yonhap news agency said, citing an unnamed senior defence ministry official in Seoul. "Beginning this year's joint drills with the US, our reserve force units will be deployed to battlefront areas and practice military logistics," said the official quoted by Yonhap. All able South Korean men are required to serve in the reserve forces for eight years after completing up to two years' compulsory military service.

But this will be the first time reserves have taken part in large-scale simulated battlefront drills, said the official quoted by Yonhap. A defence ministry spokesman declined to comment but said the training, if realised, would be intended to "genuinely boost reserve forces' capabilities instead of carrying out perfunctory practices." The South's military, criticised for perceived feeble response to the shelling attack, this month rolled out a plan to overhaul its combat readiness and extend a regular practice period for the reserve forces. Pyongyang has recently lowered its military alert status, prompting Seoul and US forces to reduce their own alert status to a normal level as the two Koreas started efforts to resume dialogue and defuse tension.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Jan 16, 2011
North Korea Sunday expressed its anger over efforts by South Korea and Japan to seek closer military ties, repeating calls for Seoul to resume talks with Pyongyang first to defuse regional tensions.

The fury came after Seoul expressed doubts about the sincerity of Pyongyang's repeated peace overtures, and instead sought closer military ties with Japan and longtime ally the US against threats from the North.

Regional tensions have also soared after the North in November shelled an island near its disputed maritime border with the South, killing four South Koreans, including two civilians.

On Sunday Rodong Sinmun, mouthpiece of the North's ruling Communist Party, labelled talks held on January 10 between Seoul and Tokyo's defence chiefs a "new military conspiracy" that hampered regional security by damaging inter-Korea ties.

"Japan has worked hard with bloodshot eyes to secure a legitimate pretext for its military overseas expansion," the newspaper said in an editorial carried by state media.

It also denounced Seoul for "paving the way for Japan's reinvasion" of the Korean peninsula, a reference to Japan's brutal colonial occupation from 1910-1945.

Despite the historical animosities, Japan and South Korea's defence chiefs pledged deeper cooperation and discussed signing agreements to share military secrets, potentially including those on the North's nuclear programmes.

"The recent military talks between the South and Japan will accelerate a military alliance among the US, Japan and South Korea and will create another major obstacle in inter-Korea dialogues and improving relations," Rodong Sinmun said.

It also urged Seoul to set aside "military game plays with foreign aggressors," stressing that "the door for inter-Korea talks is open."

Pyongyang, in a flurry of peace overtures since the November attack, on January 10 sent its first official proposal for talks with Seoul and said it would restore a cross-border hotline.

Seoul has rejected the proposal, saying Pyongyang's overtures are a cosmetic exercise to improve its international image and get much-needed aid.

The North also stepped up separate diplomatic charm offensive towards Japan, welcoming Tokyo's willingness to resume direct talks and saying it is "ready to meet and talk with countries that are friendly" to Pyongyang.

Pyongyang's state media last week praised Japanese Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara for hinting Tokyo may seek bilateral talks to revive the stalled six-party disarmament talks on the North's nuclear programmes.



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Tokyo, Seoul urge actions not words from N. Korea
Seoul (AFP) Jan 15, 2011
Japan and South Korea said Saturday that Pyongyang should take concrete steps to show its commitment to scrapping its nuclear arsenal before six-party disarmament talks can resume. At a meeting in Seoul, Japanese Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara and his counterpart Kim Sung-Hwan agreed the North must engage in productive talks with the South before other discussions among the six parties can g ... read more







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