The Oklahoman

SKorea report labels North as ‘enemy’

- Hyung-Jin Kim ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEOUL, South Korea – South Korea called North Korea “our enemy” in its biennial defense document published Thursday, reviving the label for its rival for the first time in six years, as tensions worsen between the two countries.

North Korea conducted an unpreceden­ted number of missile tests in 2022, including simulated nuclear attacks on South Korea. In response, South Korea’s conservati­ve government led by President Yoon Suk Yeol has been seeking a stronger U.S. security commitment and boosting its own military capabiliti­es.

Descriptio­ns of North Korea in past South Korean defense white papers reflect the rocky ties between the two Koreas. Past South Korean documents called North Korea the “main enemy,” “present enemy” or “enemy” in times of animosity. But they avoided such references when relations were improved.

North Korea “doesn’t give up its nukes and is persistent­ly posing military threats to us, so the North Korean government and military … is our enemy,” the 2022 South Korean defense white paper issued Thursday said.

The document noted that in December, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un called South Korea “our undoubted enemy” in a speech at a key ruling party meeting. It also cited the passage of a new North Korean law authorizin­g preemptive use of nuclear weapons in a broad range of scenarios.

The document said the North Korean nuclear program and provocatio­ns “are seriously threatenin­g our security.” It said the main objectives of South Korean defense policies include bracing for threats and a potential invasion by North Korea, deterring a war on the Korean Peninsula and contributi­ng to a peaceful future Korean reunification.

North Korea didn’t immediatel­y respond to the revived use of enemy terminolog­y in the South Korean defense paper, though it has lashed out at such labels in the past, calling them provocatio­ns that demonstrat­ed South Korean hostility.

South Korea first called North Korea its “main enemy” in 1995, a year after North Korea threatened to turn Seoul into a “sea of fire” – rhetoric the North has since repeatedly used when confrontat­ions flared with the South.

During a previous era of inter-Korean detente in the 2000s, South Korea stopped using the enemy terminolog­y, but revived it after 50 South Koreans were killed in attacks blamed on North Korea in 2010 – 46 in the torpedoing of a navy ship and four in the shelling of a border island.

South Korea again avoided using enemy labels when it was governed by Yoon’s liberal predecesso­r Moon Jaein, who espoused greater reconcilia­tion with North Korea. Defense documents published during Moon’s 20172022 rule didn’t mention North Korea by name when they said South Korea’s military “considers any force that threatens and violates the sovereignt­y, territory, people, and properties of the Republic of Korea as an enemy.”

The latest defense paper refers to Kim Jong Un by name without any of his titles, while previous papers issued under Moon’s government used both his name and titles.

Yoon, who took office in May last year, has vowed a stern response to North Korean provocatio­ns.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP ?? Past South Korean documents have called North Korea the “enemy,” but they avoided such labels in times of improved relations.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP Past South Korean documents have called North Korea the “enemy,” but they avoided such labels in times of improved relations.

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