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                South Korea Warns the North About Attack Threats

   by Steve Herman

   South Korea is expressing concern and frustration with North Korea's
   continuing bellicose rhetoric, which includes threats of a preemptive
   nuclear strike. VOA Correspondent Steve Herman has details from Seoul.
   South Korean president Park Geun-hye, speaking to graduating military
   cadets Friday, informed them she will "deal strongly with North Korea's
   provocations."
   The president says the "current security situation is very grave" as
   Pyongyang presses ahead with nuclear and missile development, and
   threatens to nullify the 1953 armistice agreement.
   In recent days North Korea has also warned it would attack with nuclear
   weapons the headquarters of its enemies - which would be the United
   States and South Korea.
   On Friday the North's organization overseeing relations with the South
   (the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea) declared void a
   non-aggression pact with Seoul and announced the North-South hotline at
   the DMZ will be severed.
   At a rally in Pyongyang Thursday, a general told the crowd the military
   has armed intercontinental ballistic missiles and other guided rockets
   with various types of atomic warheads.
   Kim Min-seo, a spokesman for South Korea's Defense Ministry, says, if
   the North were to carry out a nuclear attack against the South "the Kim
   Jong Un regime would become extinct from the planet by the will of
   mankind, as well as South Korea."
   A professor of North Korean studies at Seoul's Dongguk University, Kim
   Yong-hyun, says the latest threats from Pyongyang are clearly intended
   to heighten as much as possible tensions on the peninsula.
   Kim says the possibility that North Korea will take a low-intensity
   provocative action, such as firing short-range missiles in the vicinity
   of the disputed Yellow Sea maritime border (the Northern Limit Line),
   cannot be excluded.
   ''North Korea's threats come as the U.N. Security Council toughens
   sanctions against Pyongyang in the wake of its third nuclear test.
   China's backing of the fresh and tighter sanctions is seen as a sign of
   Beijing's increasing frustration with Pyongyang's behavior.
   China sent soldiers to fight alongside North Korea during the
   devastating civil war on the peninsula in the early 1950s. Beijing
   remains Pyongyang's sole, significant ally.
   The United States has nearly 30,000 military personnel stationed in
   South Korea.
   The two countries are currently conducting annual defense drills in
   South Korea.
   The North has called the exercises a prelude to an American nuclear
   strike on it. And Pyongyang's military is also reported currently to be
   conducting its own ground, air and sea military exercises.
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   ack-threats/1617594.html

References

   1. http://www.voanews.com/content/south-korea-warns-the-north-about-attack-threats/1617594.html