Yorkshire Post

South Korea ‘has no plans for own nuclear deterrent’

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SOUTH KOREAN president Yoon Suk Yeol said his government has no plans to pursue its own nuclear deterrent despite growing threats from the North.

Mr Yoon’s comments during a news conference came hours after South Korea’s military detected the North firing two cruise missiles from a region near its capital Pyongyang toward its western waters.

Tensions could rise further next week as the United States and South Korea kick off their biggest combined military training in years to counter the North Korean threat.

The North describes such drills as invasion rehearsals and has often responded to them with missile tests or other provocatio­ns.

Mr Yoon, inset, told reporters that South Korea does not desire political change in North Korea that is brought by force and he called for diplomacy aimed at building sustainabl­e peace between the rivals amid tensions over the North’s accelerati­ng weapons programme.

His comments came days after he proposed an “audacious” economic assistance package to North Korea if it abandons its nuclear weapons programme, while avoiding harsh criticism of the North after it threatened “deadly” retaliatio­n over a Covid-19 outbreak it blames on the South. Mr Yoon’s proposal for large-scale aid in food and healthcare and modernisin­g power and port infrastruc­ture resembled previous South Korean offers that were rejected by North Korea, which is speeding its developmen­t of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, seen by leader Kim Jong Un as his strongest guarantee of survival. Still, Mr Yoon expressed hope for “meaningful dialogue” with North Korea over his plan and stressed that Seoul is willing to provide correspond­ing economic rewards at each step of a phased denucleari­sation process if the North commits to a genuine “road map” toward fully abandoning its weapons programme.

North Korea has ramped up its missile testing to a record pace in 2022, launching more than 30 ballistic weapons so far, including its first interconti­nental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) in nearly five years. The heightened testing activity underscore­s North Korea’s dual intent to advance its arsenal and force the United States to accept the idea of the North as a nuclear power so it can negotiate economic and security concession­s from a position of strength, experts say.

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