South Korea is suspending a military deal with North Korea after tensions over North's balloons
UNB
Publish: 04 Jun 2024, 07:14 PM
SEOUL,
South Korea, Jun 04 (AP/UNB) - South Korea's government approved the suspension
of a contentious military agreement with North Korea on Tuesday, a step that
would allow it to take tougher responses to North Korean provocations.
The development came as
animosities between the rival Koreas rose sharply recently after North Korea
launched trash-carrying balloons across the border in reaction to previous
South Korean civilian leafletting campaigns.
South Korea's Cabinet
Council passed a proposal aimed at suspending the 2018 inter-Korean agreement
on lowering down frontline military tensions. The proposal will formally take
effect when it's signed by President Yoon Suk Yeol, likely later Tuesday,
according to government officials.
During the cabinet
meeting, Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, South Korea's No. 2 official, said the
government assessed that the 2018 deal has weakened South Korean military
readiness at a time when repeated North Korean provocations pose real threats
to the South Korean public.
Han cited North Korea's
balloon campaign,tests of nuclear-capable weapons targeting South Korea and
alleged jamming of GPS navigation signals in the South.
The military agreement -
reached during a short-lived era of reconciliation between the Koreas -
requires the two countries to cease all hostile acts against each other at
their border areas such as live firing drills, aerial drills and psychological
warfare.
The accord has invited
withering conservative criticism in South Korea that mutual reductions of
conventional military strength would end up weakening South's war readiness
while North Korea's nuclear capability remain intact.
In the past week, North
Korea used balloons to drop manure, cigarette butts, scraps of cloth and waste
paper on South Korea, prompting South Korea to vow unspecified
"unbearable" retaliatory steps. On Sunday, North Korea said it would
halt its balloon campaign.
South Korean officials
said the suspension of the 2018 deal would allow it to stage frontline military
drills but didn't publicly elaborate on other steps. Observers say South Korea
was considering restarting frontline propaganda loudspeaker broadcasts, a Cold
War-style psychological campaign that experts say has previously stung in
rigidly controlled North Korea as most of its 26 million people are not allowed
official accesses to foreign news.
The 2018 deal has
already been in limbo after the two Koreas taking some steps in breach of it
amid tensions over North Korea's spy satellite launch last November.
END/UNB/AP/PR
