Times of Suriname

PEntAGon CHIEF AppEAsEs SoutH KorEA wItH rEAssurAnC­E oF DEFEnsE CommItmEnt

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SOUTH KOREA - Visiting US Defense Secretary James Mattis reaffirmed US commitment to the defense of South Korea, including its extended deterrence.

The Pentagon chief said the Trump administra­tion will deal with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK)’s nuclear threats as top priority among security issues.

Mattis met with Kim Kwanjin, senior security advisor to impeached President Park Geun-hye, in the presidenti­al office Cheong Wa Dae. During the talks, Kim said it was very timely for Mattis to pick South Korea as his first overseas trip destinatio­n given the stern security situations, caused by the DPRK’s nuclear and missile threats. Concerns were deepened recently about the DPRK’s test-launch of a long-range ballistic rocket as top DPRK leader Kim Jong Un said in his New Year’s Day address that his country had entered a final stage to prepare for such launch.

Mattis and Kim agreed to push for the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) deployment in South Korea.

Seoul and Washington abruptly announced the agreement in July last year to install one THAAD battery in South Korean soil by the end of this year. Local media speculated the installati­on could be completed between May and July. It sparked strong objections from China and Russia as its X-band radar can peer into territorie­s of the two nations, destabiliz­ing security balance and boosting arms race in the region.

Major presidenti­al contenders in the South Korean opposition bloc have demanded the cancellati­on or the delay of the decision to the next government, which is forecast to be launched as early as April. President Park was impeached in December over a corruption scandal, and the constituti­onal court is expected to permanentl­y remove Park from office before the middle of March. A presidenti­al election must be held in 60 days after the court’s final ruling.

The Pentagon chief and the senior South Korean security official shared views on the need to strengthen the USSouth Korea alliance, promising to closely communicat­e with each other to respond to the DPRK’s rising threats. Meanwhile, Mattis paid a courtesy call to Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn, who is serving as acting South Korean president, according to local media reports.

During the meeting, the US defense minister said the two allies should go shoulderto-shoulder in tackling the DPRK threats, promising to further strengthen their bilateral relations under situations that South Korea is facing the DPRK provocatio­ns. US President Donald Trump, Mattis said, made it clear for him to place a priority on the US-South Korea alliance. Hwang told Mattis that it was meaningful for Mattis to select South Korea as his first foreign trip destinatio­n, given the importance of the South Korea-US alliance and its future developmen­t.

The prime minister recently emerged as one of powerful presidenti­al hopefuls in the conservati­ve bloc as former UN chief Ban Ki-moon abruptly pulled out of the presidenti­al race on Wednesday. The meeting was attended by senior presidenti­al secretary for security and foreign affairs, defense minister and the chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) on the South Korean side as well as the USFK commander and the acting US ambassador to South Korea.

Mattis will hold talks with his South Korean counterpar­t Han Min-koo on Friday morning in the South Korean defense ministry’s headquarte­rs in Seoul, before traveling to Japan for another two-day trip. (Xinhuanet.com/Photo: ABC News - Go.com)

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