Oman Daily Observer

South Korean president sends aide to US to quell fears over anti-missile system

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SEOUL: South Korean President Moon Jae-In’s top security aide left for Washington on Thursday as the new leader tries to reassure Seoul’s main ally he won’t scrap a deal to host a missile defence system that has angered China.

Moon ordered an investigat­ion this week into why his office had not been informed about the deployment of four more launchers for the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system, which are being deployed amid a growing threat of missile launches by North Korea.

The new liberal leader had pledged during the recent election campaign that he would review the decision to deploy THAAD, and said it was “very shocking” his office had not been told of the latest deployment while he is preparing for a summit with US President Donald Trump in Washington this month.

The decision to deploy the system in South Korea was made by Moon’s conservati­ve predecesso­r Park GeunHye, who was impeached and thrown from office in a corruption scandal that engulfed South Korea’s business and political elite.

“My order for a probe on THAAD is purely a domestic measure and I want to be clear that it is not about trying to change the existing decision or sending a message to the United States,” Moon told visiting US Senator Dick Durbin late on Wednesday.

The remarks were Moon’s first clear indication that he does not intend to stop the deployment, which has drawn angry protests from China, South Korea’s biggest trading partner.

Chung Eui-Yong, Moon’s National Security Adviser, also denied that the controvers­y over the THAAD deployment would have a negative impact on the summit between Moon and Trump.

“We’ve sufficient­ly explained that this has nothing to do with our alliance,” Chung told reporters before his departure.

Chung said he would meet Trump’s National Security Adviser, H R McMaster, and finalise the agenda for the summit.

The presidenti­al Blue House said on Wednesday the Defence Ministry had intentiona­lly omitted details about the THAAD battery in a report made to Chung last week, when the government was preparing for the summit.

Moon took office on May 10 without a transition period because a snap presidenti­al election was held just two months after Park was ousted.

He inherited her defence minister, along with the rest of the cabinet, and has yet to name his own. The THAAD battery was initially deployed in March in the southeaste­rn region of Seongju with just two of its maximum load of six launchers to counter the North Korean missile threat.

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