Millennium Post

S Korea, Japan sign intelligen­ce deal despite China criticism

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SEOUL: Japan and South Korea on Wednesday signed an agreement to share defence intelligen­ce about North Korea, despite protests from opposition parties and activists in Seoul and strong criticism from China.

South Korea’s defence ministry said the accord was necessary in the face of growing military threats from Pyongyang, which has conducted two nuclear tests and more than 20 missile launches this year. “It is ready to conduct additional nuclear tests and missile launches at any time,” the ministry said in a statement.

“Since we can now utilise Japan’s intelligen­ce capability to effectivel­y deal with North Korea’s escalating nuclear and missile threats, it will enhance our security interests.” Japan’s foreign ministry said the military agreement would allow the two government­s to “share informatio­n even more smoothly and swiftly”.

But China, already angry at South Korea’s planned deployment of a US missile defence system, sharply criticised Seoul and Tokyo for what it termed a “cold war mentality”. The agreement “will aggravate the situation in the Korean peninsula and bring new unsecure and unstable factors to Northeast Asia,” said foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang at a regular briefing in Beijing.

“While conducting military cooperatio­n, relevant countries

should respect the security concerns of regional countries and do more things for peace and developmen­t, not the opposite,” Shuang said.

China says Seoul’s earlier decision to deploy the THAAD missile defence system will increase the risk of military conflict in the region.

Seoul and Tokyo currently use their mutual ally Washington as an intermedia­ry when sharing military intelligen­ce on Pyongyang, under a deal signed in 2014.

The new intelligen­ce-sharing agreement is also controvers­ial in South Korea, where memories of Japan’s harsh 1910-45 colonial rule still mar relations

with Tokyo.

South Korea and Japan were on the verge of signing an intelligen­ce-sharing deal in June 2012, but Seoul backtracke­d at the last minute in response to a public outcry. Noting Tokyo’s surveillan­ce assets and location, South Korea’s defence ministry said the deal would be a “big help” in better analysing Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programmes and collecting more intelligen­ce about its ballistic missiles.

North Korea has slammed the military pact, labelling it as “a dangerous act” that would further raise already-high tensions on the Korean peninsula and open a door to Japan’s “re-invasion”.

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