Los Angeles Times

S. Korea’s leader not told about 4 launchers

New president orders inquiry into the extra deployment­s, made as part of the U.S. missile defense system.

- By Jonathan Kaiman jonathan.kaiman @latimes.com

BEIJING — South Korea’s new president, Moon Jae-in, ordered an inquiry into the U.S.-backed THAAD missile defense system Tuesday, potentiall­y jeopardizi­ng a major military project designed to intercept North Korean missiles.

In March, Washington and Seoul deployed the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, antiballis­tic missile system in the county of Seong ju, about 135 miles from Seoul. A fully equipped THAAD battery includes six to nine launchers — massive, boxy trucks that carry and fire missiles, in this case designed to intercept North Korean projectile­s midflight. The U.S. publicly deployed two.

Yet Moon was “shocked” Tuesday to learn that four additional launchers had been deployed, presidenti­al spokesman Yoon Youngchan said during a news briefing, according to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency. The country’s Defense Ministry had not informed Moon of the deployment, according to Yonhap.

Moon “called Defense Minister Han Min-koo to confirm,” Yonhap reported. “Han apparently confirmed.”

The reasons for the mixup remain unclear. Neither the U.S. nor South Korean military has publicly commented.

“President Moon ordered to find out how the four additional rocket launchers were brought into the country, who made such a decision, why this has not been disclosed to the people and why this has not been reported to the new administra­tion even to date,” Yoon said, according to the agency.

THAAD’s deployment was overseen by the country’s conservati­ve former President Park Geun-hye, who was ousted in March after months of peaceful protests. South Koreans elected Moon, a liberal, on May 9; he was inaugurate­d one day later. He did not get a customary two-month transition period, and is still working with Cabinet members appointed by his predecesso­r.

The system has stirred controvers­y, both at home and abroad. Moon has criticized Park for failing to get parliament­ary approval for THAAD — she approved it in 2016, after a North Korean nuclear test — and has not sought parliament­ary approval for the system.

“I don’t know how they’re going to play this out — you know, people are opposed to [the system], so there’s gonna be a lot of fingerpoin­ting and blame,” said Daniel Pinkston, an internatio­nal relations expert at Troy University in Seoul. “It’s hard to imagine that the [U.S.] military, just as far as inventory or paperwork go, would let four launchers with eight missiles each — so that’s 32 missiles — just slip through.”

For Moon, “THAAD wasn’t a top agenda item,” he continued. “He didn’t have a transition period. He has people to put in place. People want him to address issues of corruption, the cost of education, structural reform in the economy. Then North Korea comes down after that. He’s got all these issues on his plate, and THAAD stuff? That was a done deal.”

South Koreans have protested the system, claiming that it constitute­s a violation of the country’s sovereignt­y. North Korea has also complained, calling it a sign of the United States’ “blackheart­ed intention” that “clearly proves once again that the U.S. is harasser and destroyer of peace, indifferen­t to regional stability.”

Yet its greatest detractor is arguably Beijing, which has said the system is part of a U.S. strategy to contain China. It retaliated with a months-long campaign of diplomatic protests and unofficial sanctions against South Korean businesses.

Since Moon’s election, South Korea-China relations have improved. On Tuesday, South Korea’s Jeju Air announced plans to double its flights to Weihai, an eastern Chinese city, starting next week. China has also reportedly eased up on screening Korean television dramas; a Korean-Chinese joint drama “My Goddess, My Mom,” was recently told that it would soon be aired after indefinite delays, Reuters reported.

Although Moon is slated to meet President Trump at the White House in June, analysts say the U.S. administra­tion is poorly equipped to deal with a South Korea in flux. It has not yet nominated an ambassador to South Korea, or an assistant secretary of State for Asian and Pacific security affairs.

The U.S. has 28,500 troops stationed in South Korea, and a defense treaty with Seoul dating to the end of fighting in the Korean War in 1953.

Moon promised a relatively soft line on North Korea during his campaign; during his May 10 inaugurati­on, he vowed to “provide a turning point to lower tensions on the peninsula by firmly establishi­ng a Northeast Asia peace regime.”

Yet North Korea has tested three missiles since then, including one on Monday, hardening his stance. He said on May 17 that there was a “high possibilit­y” of conflict with North Korea, and that the South was ready and capable of striking back in the event of an attack.

 ?? Kim Jun-beom Associated Press ?? THAAD trucks carry and fire missiles designed to intercept hostile projectile­s. The U.S. publicly deployed two in Seongju county, but South Korea’s president was “shocked” to know four more launchers had been deployed.
Kim Jun-beom Associated Press THAAD trucks carry and fire missiles designed to intercept hostile projectile­s. The U.S. publicly deployed two in Seongju county, but South Korea’s president was “shocked” to know four more launchers had been deployed.

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