South Korea conducts war games to defend against Japan | Inquirer News

South Korea conducts war games to defend against Japan

/ 10:48 AM June 18, 2018

This file photo taken April 26, 2017, shows South Korean K1A2 tanks firing live rounds during a joint live firing drill between South Korea and the US at the Seungjin Fire Training Field in Pocheon, 65 kilometers northeast of Seoul. AFP

SEOUL, South Korea – South Korea on Monday will begin two days of war games to practice defending the disputed Dokdo islands off its east coast — against an unlikely attack by Japan.

Seoul has controlled the islets in the Sea of Japan (East Sea) since the end of Japanese colonial rule on the Korean peninsula.

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Tokyo also claims the islands, known as Takeshima in Japan, accusing Seoul of occupying them illegally.

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The drills come just days after US President Donald Trump announced the suspension of long-running joint exercises with South Korea — aimed at defending against North Korean aggression — calling them “expensive” and “provocative”.

While an attack from Japan is deemed unlikely, South Korea first staged the drills in 1986 and has conducted them twice a year since 2003.

“The Dokdo defence drill is a routine training conducted to prevent an invasion from external forces,” Choi Hyun-soo, a spokeswoman at Seoul’s defense ministry, said.

The two-day training — tiny compared with the suspended US-South Korea war games — will involve six warships and seven aircraft while a unit of marines will land on the largely bare rocky islets, inhabited by around 40 people — mostly police officers.

South Korea and Japan are both market economies, democracies and US allies, and both are threatened by nuclear-armed North Korea, but their relationship is heavily strained by historical and territorial issues.

The two neighbors are also mired in a long-running feud over Japan’s wartime sexual slavery of Korean women despite an agreement to settle the issue in 2015. /cbb

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TAGS: Japan, News, Sea of Japan, South korea, Takeshima, wargames

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