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South Korean defence chief vows retaliatory strikes on North Korea if provoked

South Korean Defense Minister Shin Wonsik (Han Jong-chan/Yonhap via AP)
South Korean Defense Minister Shin Wonsik (Han Jong-chan/Yonhap via AP)

South Korea’s defence minister on Friday vowed massive retaliatory missile strikes on “the heart and head” of North Korea in the event of provocation, as the rivals escalate their rhetoric over their respective spy satellite launches in recent days.

The South Korean warning — an unusually fiery rhetoric by Seoul directed at Pyongyang — came as the top security advisers from South Korea, the US and Japan gathered in Seoul for talks to discuss North Korea’s evolving nuclear threats and other issues.

During a visit to the army’s missile strategic command, South Korean defence minister Shin Wonsik ordered command officers to maintain a readiness to fire precision-guided and powerful missiles at any time, according to his ministry.

Mr Shin said the main role of the command is “lethally striking the heart and head of the enemy, though the types of its provocations can vary,” a ministry statement said.

Animosities between the two Koreas deepened after North Korea launched its first military reconnaissance satellite into space on November 21 in violation of UN bans.

South Korea, the US and Japan strongly condemned the launch, viewing it as an attempt by the North to improve its missile technology as well as establish a space surveillance system.

South Korea announced plans to resume front-line aerial surveillance in response and North Korea quickly retaliated by restoring border guard posts, according to Seoul officials.

Both steps would breach a 2018 inter-Korean deal on easing front-line military tensions.

Koreas Tensions
Photos provided by the North Korean government show what the country said is the launch of the Malligyong-1, a military spy satellite, into orbit (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP, File)

Last week, when South Korea also launched its first military spy satellite from California’s Vandenberg Space Force Base, North Korea slammed the US for alleged double standards and warned of a possible grave danger to global peace.

In a statement on Friday, Jo Chol Su, a senior North Korean Foreign Ministry official, said the North would make all available efforts to protect its national interests in the face of threats by hostile forces.

The national security advisers from South Korea, the US and Japan are to hold their first trilateral meeting in six months in Seoul on Saturday.

Ahead of the three-way meeting, South Korean national security adviser Cho Tae-yong and his Japanese counterpart, Takeo Akiba, met bilaterally on Friday and reaffirmed a need to strengthen their cooperation with the US to cope with with provocations by North Korea.

South Korea Koreas Tensions
US national security adviser Jake Sullivan with his South Korean counterpart Cho Tae-yong ahead of a three-way meeting with Japan at the weekend (South Korea Presidential Office via AP)

Mr Cho and US national security adviser Jake Sullivan also met and affirmed that Seoul and Washington remain open to diplomacy with North Korea, according to South Korea’s presidential office.

Earlier Friday, South Korea’s Unification Ministry accused North Korea of property rights infringements by unilaterally using South Korean-owned equipment at a now-shuttered joint factory park in the North.

The ministry also accused North Korea of dismantling the remains of a South Korean-built liaison office at the park that the North blew up during a previous period of tensions in 2020.