Fiji Sun

South Korea To Freeze New THAAD Deployment pending probe

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South Korea will suspend any further deployment of a controvers­ial US missile defence system until an environmen­tal impact assessment ordered by new President Moon Jae-In is finished, his office has said.

Seoul agreed last year under Mr Moon’s ousted predecesso­r, Park Geun-Hye, to deploy the powerful missile intercept system to guard against threats from nuclear-armed North Korea despite angry opposition from Beijing, which views it as a threat to its own military capabiliti­es. Two missile launchers have been deployed in the southern county of Seongju, where hundreds of residents have staged fierce protests over what they see as potential environmen­tal hazards posed by the batteries used in the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system.

There is “no need to withdraw” the two launchers that have already been deployed, a senior official at the South’s presidenti­al office told reporters. However, “additional deployment (of THAAD) should be carried out only after the environmen­tal impact assessment is over,” the official added.

“We do not view the deployment process as urgent enough to bypass the whole environmen­tal impact assessment,” he said.

The deployment freeze comes two days after Mr Moon ordered a “proper” probe into the potential environmen­tal impact of the missile batteries in a bid to win greater public support for the project.

 ??  ?? Equipment for the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence, or THAAD, system arrived in Seongju, South Korea last month.
Equipment for the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence, or THAAD, system arrived in Seongju, South Korea last month.

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