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South Korea Military Drills: Seoul Begins Live Fire Exercise Despite Pyongyang's Threat

South Korea Military Drills

HYUNG-JIN KIM   02/19/12 11:00 PM ET  AP

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea on Monday conducted live-fire military drills from five islands near its disputed sea boundary with North Korea, despite Pyongyang's threat to attack.

South Korea reported no immediate action by North Korea following the drills, which ended after about two hours. The drills took place in an area of the Yellow Sea that was the target of a North Korean artillery attack in 2010 that killed four South Koreans and raised fears of a wider conflict.

The heightened tension comes two months after the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il. His young son Kim Jong Un has taken the helm of the nation of 24 million.

South Korean military officials said they were ready to repel any attack. Residents on the front-line islands were asked to go to underground shelters before the drills started, according to South Korea's Defense Ministry and Joint Chiefs of Staff.

North Korea's military maintained increased vigilance during the South Korean drills, though it hasn't done anything suspicious, a South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff officer said on condition of anonymity, citing department rules. He refused to provide further details because he said they involve confidential military intelligence on North Korea.

Before the drills began, North Korea said it would launch a "thousands-fold more severe" punishment than the 2010 shelling if South Korea conducted the drills.

North Korea is fully prepared for a "total war," and the drills will lead to a "complete collapse" of ties between the Koreas, the North's Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea said in a statement carried Monday by the official Korean Central News Agency.

Seoul is closely monitoring North Korea's reaction. The Korean peninsula has been technically at war for about 60 years.

Officials from North Korea and the United States are to meet this week in Beijing for talks on the country's nuclear weapons program. The discussions will be the first such bilateral contact since Kim Jong Il's Dec. 17 death.

Ties between the Koreas plummeted following the 2010 shelling of front-line Yeonpyeong Island and a deadly warship sinking blamed on Pyongyang. North Korea has flatly denied its involvement in the sinking, which killed 46 South Korean sailors.

South Korean troops on the five islands fired artillery into waters southward, away from nearby North Korea, a Defense Ministry official said on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.

Residents on the islands, many of them elderly, filed into underground bomb shelters and huddled around portable heaters during the drills.

More than 1,000 people evacuated to shelters, but few came to the mainland, despite the North Korean threat, according to Onjin County, which governs the islands. Ferry services linking the islands and Incheon port on the mainland operated normally, county officials said. Officials say requests to evacuate are made each time South Korea conducts drills.

Soon after Seoul told Pyongyang of its live-fire training plans Sunday, North Korea's military called the drills a "premeditated military provocation" and warned it would retaliate for an attack on its territory.

A North Korean officer warned in an interview Sunday with The Associated Press in Pyongyang that North Koreans were always ready to "dedicate their blood to defend their inviolable territory."

The maritime line separating the countries was drawn by the U.S.-led U.N. Command without Pyongyang's consent at the close of the 1950-53 Korean War, which ended with a truce, not a peace treaty. North Korea routinely argues that the line should run farther south.

On Yeonpyeong Island, which is just seven miles (11 kilometers) from North Korean shores, about 490 people evacuated to shelters, while the rest of the 600 to 700 residents stayed at home or went to work as usual, an island official said in a phone interview, speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to talk to reporters.

South Korea also plans joint anti-submarine drills with the United States this week, but the training site is farther south from the disputed sea boundary, South Korean military officials said. About 28,500 U.S. troops are stationed in South Korea as what U.S. and South Korean officials call deterrence against North Korean aggression.

North Korea says joint U.S.-South Korea drills are a rehearsal for a northward invasion.

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South Korean marines walk to board a ship leaving for Baengnyeong Island at Incheon port in Incheon, west of Seoul, South Korea, Monday, Feb. 20, 2012. South Korea on Monday began live-fire military drills from front-line islands near its disputed sea border with North Korea, despite Pyongyang's threat to attack. (AP)

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
natureboy10307
06:22 PM on 02/23/2012
Man, this could be foreshadowing. South Korea getting prepared for North Korean invasion and Israel saying their going to attack Iran soon. Don't know if this always happen but i can smell a big war coming. Wouldn't be as *concerned* if the whole world wasn't going into a Recession. Both our allies are strong, although Israel is pretty small....and Iran is big.
07:50 PM on 02/21/2012
Just another mess with no apparent end in sight. I wonder when the North will use their nuclear toy. Poor NK's who were arrested for ingenuous mourning of Kim Jong Il's death... I believe they are more of a loose cannon than Iran but who knows. "Which would you like syphilis or hepatitus b?"
10:32 AM on 02/21/2012
Won't be long before the drug cartels buy nukes from NK and Iran. Obama just doesnt get it.

Vote Obama out in 12
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MSROADKILL612
love auto biographys. any appS to write mine?
08:14 AM on 02/21/2012
They are drilling into nth korea?
04:04 AM on 02/21/2012
South Korea does not do diggly squat without american politticians and CIA telling them to do it.

So who is fiddling with yet another fuse to a war?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
natureboy10307
06:23 PM on 02/23/2012
South Korea is pretty strong now, they been preparing and training hard since after the Korean War and with the help of America who had troops stationed there since after the war.
10:47 PM on 02/20/2012
Dear N. Korea, no one takes your "threats" serious anymore.
06:08 AM on 02/21/2012
No one is really concerned about north korea. China is the concern. China will not let north korea ever be a democratic country. Just like the korean war, china would send troops and weapons. North korea and south korea will eventually go to war. No way out of it!
10:55 AM on 02/21/2012
ron paul will get us out of it.
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Core-Sample
Not on the rug, man....
09:03 PM on 02/20/2012
NK's new leader at the buffet table had to flex his p3nis at some point. Now, back to reality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
08:59 PM on 02/20/2012
Kinda hard to do a land attack in Korea, take a look at the terrain. That's why the Korean war turned out to be a stalelmate. The entire peninsula is a series of easily defended choke points.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tobo
..........................................
09:51 PM on 02/20/2012
Take another look at the Battle of Inchon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
10:03 PM on 02/20/2012
I don't think anyone will fall for it twice. Do you?
11:48 PM on 02/20/2012
Not true. It turned into a stalemate because our intelligence didn't believe the Chinese would intervene with 4 divisions of troops which tilted the power on the battlefield. If we had committed ourselves to winning the war like we did against Japan, the outcome would have been different.

We defeated the Koreans with ease not only retaking the south but the whole peninsula up to the the border with China. Once the Chinese stepped in, we were too afraid of WWIII breaking out. We were never sure if Stalin would join in the fight if China started taking heavy losses.

Chinese jets would attack our forces and run back into Chinese airspace, we told our pilots not to follow them across the Yalu river into Chinese airspace. Similar to our folly in Vietnam, letting the Vietcong (as with Pakistan now) attack us from Cambodia and then run back and hide. When the U.S. is fully committed to defeating an enemy on the battlefield I believe the outcome will always be in our favor.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
07:42 PM on 02/21/2012
It's too bad when people start believing the government bull. That last bit was straight out of a West Point pep talk. You're right about part of the rest though. The key was Inchon which nobody will fall for again.
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earto44
Defender of planet Erf.
08:05 PM on 02/20/2012
Really ?

Really?

NK. you need to come up with a new plan. How about starting out with. " I'm sorry, and can you get us some food"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
09:00 PM on 02/20/2012
That really is the truth, but have you seen the son who took over? I think he still sucks his thumb.
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commiepinko
The Naked Truth
07:50 PM on 02/20/2012
I'm sick of all the Korean Peninsula BS. Let them work it out among themselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
09:02 PM on 02/20/2012
I've said that for decades. The regular people would just like to reunite their country, they need to get rid of the "leadership" on both sides, us, and get their country together.
08:17 AM on 02/21/2012
The regular people in South Korea maybe, in North Korea they tend to have a different opinion and it would take some time to give them enough information on the state of the world for them to change it on their own.
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07:39 PM on 02/20/2012
I miss refresher training
07:03 PM on 02/20/2012
I once tossed a nickle into a fountain.
06:41 PM on 02/20/2012
I don't care how tough these south koreans want to train and look. the fact is that even as technologically backwards the N. Korean are, they could take the south--at least for a while. the rhetoric has to stop from the south. instead they need to respond concurrently with the events. All this show of force is a little untimely, I think. It only makes them look silly, as the North does most of the time. it seems they always get the worsth out of every confrontation, so why escalate the tension?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
09:03 PM on 02/20/2012
That's not actually true. If it were, it would have been done by now. Take a look at a terrain map and tell us how you would go about it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nightwind928
11:25 PM on 02/20/2012
I saw a company of South Korean soldiers when I was in Viet Nam back in 1968. They didn't look tough, they WERE tough and they were especially feared by the V .C. and N. V. A. That was over 40 years ago. They're better trained and equipped now then they were then Don't confuse these guys with some rag-tag force like the Afghan or Iraqi army who lack spirit and will and are about as prepared to fight as a Cocker spaniel. The South Koreans are as "good in the woods" as any army in the world and better than most. If you think North Korea would just walk through the ROK soldiers and cruise into Seoul like they did in the 1950's, both you and they are in for a terrible surprise and badly mistaken. That was THEN...this is NOW....BIG difference. And the first time the N K's use nukes, (which they almost certainly will when they see this going badly in their direction)....well, it then becomes a brand new ball game for all of us in the 21st century.
11:53 PM on 02/20/2012
I think you're right. they are tough, just the mentality of the north (brainwashed) makes them tougher. just like islamic militants, they come to die.
10:56 AM on 02/21/2012
Vote to stay out of conflict.Vote for Ron Paul.
celticfireusa
I Am A Limousine Liberal
06:06 PM on 02/20/2012
They fear the Wrath Of Obama no attack...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
09:03 PM on 02/20/2012
Ya right.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nightwind928
11:38 PM on 02/20/2012
They started a lot of crapola on Dubya's 8 year watch, and I didn't see him in any hurry to take them on..and he started full scale wars on absolutely nothing but a hunch. NO president from either party since Harry Truman..including your great godhead Ronnie Ray-Gun has wanted to stick their hand in that hornets nest, and that was when they DIDN'T have nukes, but somehow you suggest Obama is weak because he has the good sense not to either? Do you "Baggers" ever even stop to consider what degree of vitriolic nonsense comes out of your mouths before you spout it?
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Latzy von Biron
Just living is not enough.
05:38 PM on 02/20/2012
These provocations by the South Korean military keep happening far to frequently, and at the same disputed spot, without any reason.
If they are attacked, it would pull the US into the conflict. What is the gain from such war which would justify it?
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Foodgrade
Learn to grow banannas
09:04 PM on 02/20/2012
What troops would we throw in? The boy scouts? There's no oil in Korea.
08:24 AM on 02/21/2012
Well, there are about 28,500 troops stationed in South Korea due to US treaty obligations and if North Korea resumes aggression (i.e. invades) the US is obligated to come to South Korea's defense.
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guardstar360
free speech is a double edged sword !
02:22 AM on 02/21/2012
This is what the USA is trying to avoid. North Korea's policy is to seek reunification without what it sees as outside interference, through a federal structure retaining each side's leadership and systems. Both North and South Korea signed the June 15th North–South Joint Declaration in which both sides made promises to seek out a peaceful reunification. The Democratic Federal Republic of Korea is a proposed state first mentioned by then North Korean president Kim Il-sung on October 10, 1980, proposing a federation between North and South Korea in which the respective political systems would initially remain.[