HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A311-2002Jun29.html
 
South Korean Ship Sunk in Naval Battle
By Christopher Torchia 

SEOUL, South Korea � A North Korean warship sank a South Korean patrol
boat in the Yellow Sea Saturday, killing at least four sailors and
wounding 19 in the worst border clash in recent years on the world's
last Cold War frontier.

  The South accused the North of violating the armistice that ended
the Korean War, but a defiant North said the South shot first.
 
  The confrontation lasted 21 minutes, dealing a new blow to Korean
reconciliation efforts and embarrassing the South during its moment
in the sun as host to the World Cup soccer tournament.
 
  There was no immediate word on North Korean casualties or missing. A
Northern warship was seen being towed away from the battle scene in
flames, according to South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff.
 
  "This provocative act by North Korea is a serious violation of the
Armistice Agreement and could have serious implications in many
areas," said Gen. Leon LaPorte, who commands some 37,000 U.S. troops
stationed in South Korea as a deterrent against North Korea.
 
  LaPorte's statement did not elaborate about the implications, but
said U.S. and South Korean forces were in "close contact" after the
attack. He has asked for a command meeting with North Korean officers
to investigate the action, but said the North has not responded.
 
  A Pentagon spokesman, Cmdr. Randy Sandoz, said there was no
"heightened alert" and South Korea had not made any request for U.S.
assistance.
 
  President Kim Dae-jung called an emergency meeting of the National
Security Council, while South Korea's military sent a 1,200-ton
battleship to the poorly marked border, accompanied by a squadron of
fighter jets.
 
  "The military provocation of pre-emptive firing by a North Korean
navy patrol ship is a clear violation of the armistice and an act
that raises tension on the Korean peninsula. We cannot keep silent,"
the presidential Blue House quoted Kim as saying at the hourlong
meeting.
 
  In a statement afterward, Defense Minister Kim Dong-shin demanded an
apology, punishment of those responsible and a promise from North
Korea to refrain from such actions in the future.
 
  The clash occurred at 10:25 a.m. as South Korean navy vessels tried
to repel two North Korean navy warships and an unspecified number of
Northern fishing boats, the Southern military said.
 
  Two North Korean warships ventured three miles into the South's
waters, ignoring loudspeaker warnings to withdraw, the military said.
 
  One of the Northern boats then fired a heavy caliber gun from about
500 yards, scoring a direct hit on the steering room of a South
Korean patrol boat with 27 sailors aboard, the South's military said.
 
  North Korean state-run media denied the claim, saying the northern
vessel was defending itself against an intrusion into the North's
waters.
 
  The clash was the worst in three years, killing at least four South
Koreans  �  a lieutenant and three enlisted men. At least one South
Korean was missing. The South Korean military said 22 sailors were
injured, but later revised the number to 19.
 
  The skirmish was a setback to Kim's so-called "sunshine" policy of
trying to engage the isolated, communist North, which shares a
sealed, heavily fortified border with the South. The 1950-53 Korean
War ended with an armistice, not a peace treaty.
 
  South Korea's opposition Grand National Party, which has criticized
Kim's policy toward the North as too lenient, speculated that North
Korea was trying to disrupt the World Cup soccer tournament, which is
being co-hosted by South Korea and Japan and ends Sunday.
 
  President Kim canceled plans with Cabinet ministers and aides to
watch the South Korean team's evening playoff game against Turkey on
television. Big crowds gathered in the streets of major cities to
cheer their national soccer team, which lost 3-2.
 
  Kim planned to go ahead with a trip Sunday to Japan to attend the
World Cup final between Brazil and Germany, said presidential
spokeswoman Park Sun-sook.
 
  It was unclear how the incident would affect prospects for a revival
of long-suspended dialogue between North Korea and the United States,
South Korea's chief ally.
 
  U.S.-North Korean tensions have undermined Korean reconciliation
efforts, which stalled soon after the first-ever Korean summit in
2000 gave rise to a flurry of exchanges. The peninsula has been
divided since 1945.
 
  On Thursday, a U.S. State Department official proposed to North
Korean diplomats at the United Nations that talks resume in the
second week of July in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital.
 
  South Korea's Unification Ministry, which handles North Korea
policy, said exchanges between local non-governmental groups and
North Korea would continue despite the clash.
 
  The gun battle Saturday followed a series of border incursions by
North Korean navy ships into South Korean waters in the area in
recent weeks.

  In the summer of 1999, a series of border violations by North Korean
ships touched off the first naval clash between the two Koreas since
the Korean War. One North Korean warship sank and about 30 North
Korean sailors died, according to South Korea. Several South Korean
sailors were wounded.
______________________________
http://www.washingtonpost.com/

=====
Lake Merritt Neighbors Organized for Peace.  Weekly peace walks around Lake Merritt in 
Oakland.  For directions &
public transportation info go to
http://www.webwm.com/LMNOP/where_when.htm
Every Sunday at 3 P.M.  Info:  (510)763-8712, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or 
http://www.webwm.com/LMNOP

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! - Official partner of 2002 FIFA World Cup
http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com

---------------------------
ANTI-NATO INFORMATION LIST

==^================================================================
This email was sent to: [email protected]

EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?a84x2u.bacIlu
Or send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Reply via email to