The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US veep tours S. Korea’s heavily fortified border

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SEOUL: US Vice-President Kamala Harris toured South Korea’s heavily fortified border with the nuclear-armed North yesterday, part of a trip aimed at strengthen­ing the security alliance with Seoul.

Pyongyang conducted two banned ballistic missile launches in the days before Harris’s arrival, continuing a record-breaking streak of weapons tests this year.

At an observatio­n post atop a steep hill overlookin­g North Korea, Harris peered through bulky binoculars as US and South Korean soldiers pointed out features, including defences, in the area.

“It’s so close,” she said. Harris also visited the Panmunjom Truce Village – where then-US president Donald Trump met the North’s Kim Jong Un in 2019 – and talked to US soldiers at Camp Bonifas in the Joint Security Area.

On the North Korean side of the border at Panmunjom, guards in hazmat suits could be seen watching as Harris was shown the demarcatio­n line between the two countries – which remain technicall­y at war.

Speaking at the Demilitari­sed Zone (DMZ), Harris said that US and South Korean soldiers were ‘serving shoulder to shoulder... to maintain the security and the stability of this region of the world’.

She said the US commitment to South Korea’s defence was ‘ironclad’, adding that the allies were ‘aligned’ in their response to the growing threat posed by the North’s weapons programmes.

The allies both want ‘a complete denucleari­sation of the Korean peninsula’, but in the interim they are ‘ready to address any contingenc­y’, she said.

South Korean and US officials have warned for months that Kim Jong Un is preparing to conduct another nuclear test.

Harris decried North Korea’s ‘brutal dictatorsh­ip, rampant human rights violations and an unlawful weapons program that threatens peace and stability’.

Washington has about 28,500 troops stationed in South Korea to help protect it from the North, and the allies are conducting a large-scale joint naval exercise this week in a show of force.

Harris’ trip to the DMZ is likely to infuriate Pyongyang, which branded United States House Speaker Nancy Pelosi the ‘worst destroyer of internatio­nal peace’ when she visited the border in August.

Harris arrived in Seoul after a trip to Japan, where she attended the state funeral of assassinat­ed former prime minister Shinzo Abe.

Earlier yesterday, Harris met President Yoon Suk-yeol for talks dominated by security issues – although Seoul also raised its concerns over a new law signed by US President Joe Biden that removes subsidies for electric cars built outside America, impacting Korean automakers such as Hyundai and Kia.

Harris, America’s first woman vice president, also met what the White House called ‘groundbrea­king women leaders’ of South Korea to discuss gender equality issues, a topic she said she raised with Yoon during their talks.

Yoon, who has pledged to abolish Seoul’s Ministry of Gender Equality, has faced domestic criticism for a lack of women in his cabinet.

On Wednesday, the South’s spy agency said North Korea’s next nuclear test could happen as soon as next month, likely after China’s upcoming party congress but before the US midterms.

The isolated regime has tested nuclear weapons six times since 2006, most recently in 2017. Earlier this month it changed its laws, declaring itself an ‘irreversib­le’ nuclear power.

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