The Borneo Post

China, Russia to step up opposition to South Korean anti-missile system

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BEIJING: China and Russia have agreed to intensify their coordinate­d opposition to the deployment of a US missiledef­ence system in South Korea, the Chinese foreign ministry said yesterday.

South Korea decided last year to deploy the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defence ( THAAD) system in response to the threat from North Korean missiles.

But China and Russia worry that the system’s powerful radar can penetrate their territory and undermine their security, disrupting a balance of power in the region while doing nothing to lower tension on the Korean peninsula.

South Korean officials have said THAAD is a purely defensive measure against North Korean threats and does not target any other country.

“Both sides said they will continue to strengthen their coordinate­d opposition to THAAD”, the two countries’ deputy foreign ministers agreed on Tuesday, the Chinese Foreign Ministry’s said in a statement on its website.

China and Russia agreed in January to take unspecifie­d ‘countermea­sures’ in response to THAAD.

South Korea’s defence ministry struck a deal this week with an affiliate of the Lotte Group conglomera­te to acquire land southeast of the capital, Seoul, for the deployment of the missile system.

The deal sparked protests from China’s state media, which called for a boycott of South Korean cars and telephones and for people to shun its entertainm­ent exports.

South Korean officials have said they expect the missile system to be deployed and operationa­l this year.

North Korea’s drive to develop nuclear weapons and missiles has angered China, the North’s sole major diplomatic and economic supporter.

China has pushed for the resumption of six-party talks involving it, North Korea, South Korea, Japan, Russia and the United Sates, on North Korea’s nuclear ambitions as a way to resolve difference­s.

China has also called for the denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula.— Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows Chinese military police attending an anti-terrorist oath-taking rally in Hetian, northwest China’s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. — AFP photo
File photo shows Chinese military police attending an anti-terrorist oath-taking rally in Hetian, northwest China’s Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region. — AFP photo

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