S. Korea slams North over submarine, artillery
deployments
North Korea has
mobilised dozens of submarines and doubled its artillery units along the
border, South Korea said Sunday, accusing Pyongyang of undermining
top-level talks aimed at averting a military confrontation.
A
defense ministry spokesman said 70 percent of the North's total
submarine fleet -- or around 50 vessels -- had left their bases and
disappeared from Seoul's military radar.
The movement of such a
large number of submarines was "unprecedented," the spokesman said,
adding that Seoul and Washington were beefing up their military
surveillance in response.
"The number is nearly 10 times the normal level... we take the situation very seriously," he said.
The North has also doubled the number of artillery units along the heavily-fortified land border with the South, he added.
The
move came as top officials from both Koreas resumed a talks aimed at
easing military tensions after a marathon negotiating session the night
before ended without final agreement.
"The North is adopting a two-faced stance with the talks going on," said the spokesman.
Yonhap
news agency, citing military officials, said the submarine deployment
was the largest since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.
"No one
knows whether the North will attack our warships or commercial
vessels... we are mobilising all our surveillance resources to locate
them," it quoted one military official as saying.
The North
operates more than 70 submarines -- one of the world's largest fleets --
compared to about 10 in the South, according to Seoul's latest defense
white paper.
The South accused Pyongyang in 2010 of using a
submarine to torpedo a Seoul warship resulting in the loss of 46 lives
-- a charge the North denied.
Tension flared on the Korean
peninsula after Seoul accused Pyongyang of planting landmines across the
border that earlier this month maimed two South Korean soldiers.
Pyongyang
denied involvement but Seoul retaliated by resuming loudspeaker
propaganda broadcast hated by the North along the border on August 10.
The
North's leader Kim Jong-Un last week ordered his military to move to a
war-footing after an exchange of artillery fire on Thursday that claimed
no casualties but further escalated tension.
0 التعليقات:
إرسال تعليق