Inquirer News

North Korea issues warning ahead of US-South Korea summit

North Korean soldiers salute in front of Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, the mausoleum where the bodies of the late leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il lie embalmed, in Pyongyang on Thursday, April 25, 2013. North Korea on Thursday marked the 81st anniversary of the founding of its military, which began as an anti-Japanese militia and now has an estimated 1.2-million troops. AP

SEOUL, South Korea—North Korea is threatening the US and South Korea over joint naval drills taking place this week in tense Yellow Sea waters ahead of a Washington summit by the allies’ leaders.

The North’s Korean People’s Army warning Tuesday was highly conditional. It said it will hit back if any shells fall in its territory. Should the allies respond to that, Pyongyang’s military vows to strike five South Korean frontline islands.

While such language is standard, it comes at a time of tentative diplomatic maneuvering. Pyongyang had somewhat eased a tirade of threats aimed at larger-scale military drills by the allies that ended April 30.

Seoul calls its drills routine but Pyongyang calls them invasion preparation.

Both countries claim frontline Yellow Sea waters as their own. Their navies have regularly clashed.

Exit mobile version