United on denuclearisation


Defence ties: Ahn (left) and Koizumi inspecting honour guards during a welcoming ceremony at the Defence Ministry in Seoul. — AP

The defence ministers of South Korea and Japan have reaffir­med their countries’ commitment to the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula, despite Pyongyang’s repeated pledges to expand its nuclear arsenal.

The meeting comes after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un vowed to strengthen his country’s defence capabilities, including equipping its navy with nuclear weapons and pressing ahead with missiles testing.

South Korean Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back held talks with Japanese counterpart Shinjiro Koizumi in Seoul, who is on a two-day visit, during which the two agreed to explore ways to deepen defence cooperation.

Seoul and Tokyo are both security allies of Washington, but cooperation between their militaries has been hampered by historical tensions stemming from Japan’s colonial rule of the Korean Penin­sula in the early 20th century.

But the two “reaffirmed their commitment to the complete denu­clearisation of the Korean Peninsula and the establishment of lasting peace, and agreed to continue bilateral cooperation as well as trilateral cooperation among South Korea, Japan and the United States”, Seoul’s defence min­istry said in a statement relea­sed after the bilateral meeting.

The meeting also came weeks after the two neighbours held their first joint maritime search-and-rescue exercise in nine years, a move widely seen as another step towards closer defence cooperation.

The renewed commitment by the two defence chiefs to rid the peninsula of nuclear weapons, however, comes as Pyongyang has recently vowed not only to retain its nuclear arsenal but also expand it.

Kim vowed earlier this month to beef up North Korea’s defence capabilities, citing military modernisation efforts by South Korea and the United States that he said were pushing the region “to the brink of a nuclear war”.

He also vowed that his country would equip its navy with nuclear weapons and build larger warships.

Pyongyang has repeatedly decla­red itself an “irreversible” nuclear state since a 2019 summit between Kim and his US counterpart Donald Trump in Hanoi collap­sed over the scope of ­denuclearisation and sanctions relief.

North Korea remains techni­cally at war with the South because the Korean War ended in an armistice rather than a peace treaty. — AFP

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