Seoul, Nov 13: The United States and South Korea on Monday updated a bilateral security agreement with the aim of more effectively countering North Korea’s evolving nuclear and missile threats. The move followed high-level military talks in Seoul, where the allies also discussed enhancing three-way defence exercises with Japan and improving information-sharing on North Korean missile launches.
US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin was in Seoul for annual security talks with South Korean military officials, including Defence Minister Shin Won-sik, which were focused on boosting nuclear deterrence against North Korea. They also talked about how the allies could coordinate over broader geopolitical issues, including Russia’s war on Ukraine and China’s regional assertiveness, Austin said.
Tensions between the Koreas are at their highest point in years as the pace of both North Korea’s weapons tests and South Korea’s combined military exercises with the United States have intensified in a cycle of tit-for-tat.
During their Security Consultative Meeting, Austin and Shin signed a new version of their countries’ Tailored Deterrence Strategy agreement, which was revised for the first time in a decade to address the growing threat of the North’s military nuclear programme.
Shin said the new document spells out that the United States would mobilise its full range of military capabilities, including nuclear ones, to defend the South in the event of a North Korean nuclear attack. He also said the document will provide a template for the allies to strategise how South Korea could assist US nuclear operations in such events with its conventional capabilities but didn’t elaborate further.
“Our deterrence commitment to the ROK remains ironclad – that includes a full range of our nuclear, conventional and missile defence capabilities,” Austin said at a news conference.
The US and the South Korean government have also been strengthening their trilateral security cooperation with Japan, which has included joint military exercises and tightened defense planning, in response to North Korea’s intensifying weapons development and verbal threats of nuclear conflict.
Arriving in South Korea over the weekend, Austin earlier met Shin during a three-way meeting with Japanese Defence Minister Minoru Kihara, who participated in the talks through online video.
They agreed to start as planned a real-time information sharing arrangement on North Korean missiles launches in December. They also agreed to set up multiyear plans in coming weeks to enhance their trilateral military exercises, South Korea’s Defence Ministry said. (AP)