By: Agence France-Presse
DAEJEON, South Korea -- South Korean President Park Geun-Hye
warned North Korea on Tuesday that its only "path to survival" lay in
abandoning its nuclear and missile programs.
In a speech to mark the third anniversary of the sinking of a South
Korean naval vessel by what Seoul insists was a North Korean submarine,
Park called on Pyongyang to "change course" at a time of elevated
military tension on the Korean peninsula.
"For the North, the only path to survival lies in stopping
provocations and threats, abandoning its nuclear weaponry and missiles,
and becoming a responsible member of the international community," Park
said.
The president delivered her speech at the national cemetery in the
central city of Daejeon where the 46 sailors who died when the Cheonan
corvette sunk are buried.
North Korea has always denied any involvement in the incident which precipitated a total freeze in South-North relations.
"Even now, North Korea is threatening our national security," Park
said, citing Pyongyang's successful long-range rocket test in December
and the third nuclear test it carried out last month.
Both events triggered UN sanctions that infuriated the North, which
has spent the past month issuing increasingly dire threats about
unleashing an "all-out war" backed by nuclear weapons.
Sabre-rattling and displays of brinkmanship are nothing new in the
region, but there are concerns that the current situation is so volatile
that one accidental step could escalate into serious confrontation and
conflict.
Bruce Klingner, a Korea expert at the conservative Heritage
Foundation in Washington, believes the "risk of miscalculation and
escalation" is heightened by the presence of new leaders in both Koreas.
Kim Jong-Un, believed to be in his late 20s, succeeded his late
father Kim Jong-Il as North Korea's supreme leader a little more than a
year ago, while Park was only sworn in last month.
Park had campaigned on a pledge of greater engagement with North
Korea, but February's nuclear test put any rapprochement on indefinite
hold.
Kim, meanwhile, has spent the past few weeks touring frontline
military units, monitoring live fire artillery drills and drone strikes
and making inflammatory speeches about wiping out the enemy.
On the eve of the Cheonan sinking anniversary, Kim oversaw joint army
and navy exercises to repel an amphibious landing along the eastern
coast.
"He stressed the need to destroy the enemies in waters to the last
man ... and send all of them to the bottom of the sea as they run wild
like wolves threatened with fire," the official Korean Central News
Agency reported.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
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