South Korea, US begin naval drills amid nuclear tensions

SOUTH KOREA and the US have begun three days of naval exercises in what is being seen as a show of force aimed at North Korea.

Monday, February 04, 2013
The attack submarine USS San Francisco (SSN 711) is escorted by two harbour tugs in this file picture. The drills will involve a US nuclear submarine - Wikimedia Commons. Net photo.

SOUTH KOREA and the US have begun three days of naval exercises in what is being seen as a show of force aimed at North Korea. The scheduled drills, involving a US nuclear submarine, come after North Korea said it was planning to carry out its third test of a nuclear device. The US and South Korea have promised "significant consequences” if it goes ahead with the underground explosion.The North has criticised the naval drills as "war-mongering”.The exercises, taking place off the east coast of the Korean peninsula, involve live fire, naval manoeuvres and submarine detection drills.Officials have stressed they were planned before the latest rise in tensions.But South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Jung Seung-Jo said the presence of the nuclear-powered submarine USS San Francisco in the region "would itself serve as a message to North Korea”.North Korea says its launch of a rocket in December was for the sole purpose of putting a satellite into orbit, but the US and North Korea’s neighbours say it was a test of long-range missile technology banned under UN resolutions.After the UN Security Council voted to increase its sanctions against Pyongyang, it announced plans to carry out what it described as a "high level” nuclear test, aimed at it "arch enemy”, the US.South Korean officials say they believe North Korea is now in the final stages of preparing for the test.