The Borneo Post

Seoul rejects Trump demand it pays for missile system

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SEOUL: Seoul yesterday brushed aside US President Donald Trump’s suggestion it should pay for a US$1 billion missile defence system the two allies are installing in South Korea to guard against threats from the North.

The first parts of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence ( THAAD) system have already been delivered to a former golf course in the South — infuriatin­g China — at a time of heightened tensions over Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile programmes.

Top US off icials have said THAAD wil l be operationa­l ‘within days’.

“I informed South Korea it would be appropriat­e if they paid. It’s a billion-dollar system,” Trump was quoted as saying by the Reuters news agency. “It’s phenomenal, shoots missiles right out of the sky.”

The two countries have been in a security alliance since the 195053 Korean war, and more than 28,000 US troops are stationed in the South.

Seoul retorted that under the Status of Forces Agreement that governs the US military presence in the country, the South would provide the THAAD site and infrastruc­ture while the US would pay to deploy and operate it.

“There is no change to this basic position,” South Korea’s defence ministry said in a statement.

Therowcome­swith tensions high on the Korean peninsula following a series of missile launches by the North and warnings from the Trump administra­tion that military action was an ‘option on the table’.

Trump said there was ‘a chance’ of “a major, major conflict” with the North — which would put the South, whose capital is within range of Pyongyang’s artillery, at risk of gigantic casualties.

But earlier this week Washington said it would seek stronger sanctions against Pyongyang and held open the possibilit­y of negotiatio­ns, with US Pacific Command chief Admiral Harry Harris saying it wanted to bring leader Kim Jong-Un “to his senses, not to his knees”.

The White House also wants China to do more to rein in the North, with Trump saying he believed leader Xi Jinping was ‘ trying very hard’.

But Beijing has been infuriated by the THAAD deployment, which it fears weaken its own ballistic capabiliti­es and says upsets the regional security balance.

Social media commentato­rs derided Trump’s comments. “So he wants to start a war with North Korea and he wants South Korea to pay for it,” wrote one Twitter poster.

THAAD is designed to intercept and destroy short and mediumrang­e ballistic missiles during their final phase of flight.

South Koreans are ambivalent over its deployment, with only 51.8 per cent in favour in a Korea Research opinion poll last month.

The country has already been hit hard by a series of measures imposed by Beijing as apparent retaliatio­n.

The tourist industry has been hammered by a Chinese ban on tour groups, with visitor numbers from the Asian giant plummeting 40 per cent in March. — AFP

 ??  ?? This handout file photo received by the US Department of Defence/Missile Defence Agency shows a terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) intercepto­r being launched from a THAAD battery located on Wake Island in the Pacific Ocean, during the Flight...
This handout file photo received by the US Department of Defence/Missile Defence Agency shows a terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) intercepto­r being launched from a THAAD battery located on Wake Island in the Pacific Ocean, during the Flight...

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