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Asian arms race

May 30, 2009

US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has said that Washington will never accept a nuclear-armed North Korea and has sternly warned Pyongyang against transferring any nuclear material or technology.

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North Korean military honor guards in a lineup
North Korea is increasingly flexing its military musclesImage: AP

In a speech to an Asian defense conference in Singapore, Gates said that the threat from North Korea, which this week detonated a nuclear device and launched a series of missiles, could trigger an arms race in Asia.

"We will not stand idly by as North Korea builds a capability to wreak destruction on any target in the region or on us," Gates told the conference delegates.

Compounding tensions on the Korean peninsula, a South Korean newspaper, quoting sources in Washington, said on Saturday that Pyongyang was preparing to move an intercontinental ballistic missile from a factory to a launch pad on the country's eastern coast.

South Korean Defense Minister Lee Sang Hee urged the UN Security Council on Saturday to take action against North Korea, stressing that his government would work peacefully to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue.

North Korea increasingly bellicose

South Korean demonstrators burning effigies of Kim Jong-il and mock nuclear missiles
South Koreans protested the North's recent nuclear testImage: AP

Increasingly belligerent North Korea earlier warned South Korea that its decision to join a US-led anti-proliferation campaign is tantamount to a declaration of war, freeing it from the Korean War armistice.

In a statement released by the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), North Korea said it no longer felt bound by the Korean War armistice and that anyone who provoked it would "face unimaginable merciless punishment."

The statement added that the regime of Kim Jong Il could no longer guarantee the safety of US and South Korean ships off its western coast.

The hard-line announcement came in response to Seoul’s decision to join the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI), which provides for the searching of ships thought to be carrying any part of weapons of mass destruction.

South Korea became a full member of the PSI on Tuesday after North Korea conducted a second internationally condemned nuclear test Monday, considerably more powerful than its first test almost three years ago, and also fired several short-range missiles.

But the North made it clear in its statement that it would not tolerate the stopping and searching of its ships. Anyone attempting to do so, it said, would face an "immediate and strong military strike."

Coordinated International response being sought

Visitors look at a map of North Korea's missiles at an observation post in South Korea
North Korea has an array of missiles and artillery aimed at South KoreaImage: AP

The five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus South Korea and Japan have met behind closed doors for talks on a possible new resolution following Pyongyang's latest nuclear test.

The Russian ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, who currently holds the rotating council presidency, said Russia planned to support a tough resolution. He said the group was looking at different points of view and a variety of suggestions, but that it was too early to talk about them.

Speaking after the meeting, US ambassador to the UN Susan Rice said "I think we are off to a good start,“ but added that the meeting was just the first step.

gb/dpa/AFP

Editor: Nick Amies