US, allies warn decisive response if North Korea tests nuke
Officials from the United States and its Asian allies Japan and South Korea suspect North Korea is preparing for a nuclear test
US, allies warn decisive response if North Korea tests nuke
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Officials from the United States and its Asian allies Japan and South Korea suspect North Korea is preparing for a nuclear test, and vice foreign ministers from the three countries said Wednesday their joint response would be "decisive."
Cho Hyundong, South Korea's First Vice Foreign Minister, said the trio is bolstering their defense cooperation to deter the growing possibility of North Korea's use of nuclear weapons since the adoption in September of legislation spelling out scenarios where it would use nukes, including preemptively.
North Korea's new nuclear policy is “creating a serious tension on the Korean Peninsula,” Cho told a joint news conference after talks with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Japanese Vice Foreign Minister Takeo Mori.
“South Korea and the U.S. will step up their extended deterrence by utilizing all the elements of the national power and show an overwhelming, decisive response to any use of a nuclear weapon by North Korea,” Cho said.
In 2022 alone, North Korea has launched more than 20 ballistic missiles at unprecedented pace, including one that overflew northern Japan in early October. It has also fired a barrage of artilleries toward the south in response to South Korea's joint military exercises with the United States, which Pyongyang views as a practice to invade the country.
Sherman, during her meeting with Cho on Tuesday ahead of the three-way talks, criticized North Korea's military actions as “irresponsible, dangerous and destabilizing" and said the United States will fully use its military capabilities, including nuclear, as she warned North Korea against escalating its provocations.
Sherman stressed again Wednesday that the cooperation among the three countries are “ironclad," citing signs of Japan and South Korea improving their troubled ties over historical wartime-related disputes.
“There is so much we can achieve and are achieving when our countries work together,” Sherman said.
It was the second in-person meeting of the three officials since conservative South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol took office in May, signaling an improvement in difficult ties between Tokyo and Seoul. A year ago in Washington, Japanese and South Korean vice ministers declined to participate in a joint news conference after their talks, leaving Sherman to make a solo media appearance.
The three officials also condemned Russia's nuclear threat, as well as any other escalation of threats, and its unsubstantiated allegation that Ukraine was preparing to launch a so-called dirty bomb — which uses explosives to scatter radioactive waste — as unacceptable.
Mori said the three officials also agreed to closely watch China's maritime activity in the East and South China Seas and the situation in the Taiwan Strait under Chinese President Xi Jinping's third term.
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Follow AP’s coverage of the Asia-Pacific region at https://apnews.com/hub/asia-pacific
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