Thursday, December 2, 2010

North Korea may attack again

The pressure in Korean peninsula is unlikely to subside as South Korean intelligence chief Won Sei-hon said the North is "highly likely" to assault again, despite joint naval drills with U.S. navy carried out early this week. Yonhap Information company mentioned Won produced the observation throughout a parliamentary committee briefing on Wednesday stressing growing public unrest and worsening financial scenario in North Korea as the motivating elements for Pyongyang to inflame tensions in the area and in addition exhibit the heir-apparent Kim Jong-un because the leader who can steer the country into future. The joint naval physical exercise held in the Yellow Sea that ended on Wednesday involving 75 aircraft and 10 warships, including the nuclear-powered USS George Washington, was the greatest in a series of drills held in recent months, ignoring threats from Pyongyang and appeals from Beijing. Seoul says an additional main exercise is likely early next month. China, that is an ally from the North, is reportedly blocking a movement on the UN Security council to sentence the North Korean assault on South Korean island of Yeonpyeong on Nov. 23, killing 4 citizens such as two soldiers and flattening several buildings. Now, Japan may also join the US and Korean ministerial degree assembly on Monday. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Korean foreign minister Kim Sung-hwan and his Japanese counterpart Seiji Maehara will hold the trilateral assembly to assess the affect of war drills in the region. Meanwhile, pressure is mounting on North Korea to halt its uranium enrichment plan. UN nuclear watchdog IAEA chief Yukiya Amano expressed wonderful concern on Thursday more than the reports that Pyongyang's uranium enrichment activities dated a lot further back than it previously claimed. "It was with great concern that I learned of recent reports about a brand new uranium enrichment facility, along with the building of a new light h2o reactor, in the DPRK (North Korea)" "I urge the DPRK to totally implement all of the pertinent resolutions from the (IAEA) common conference and of the (UN) Security Council. Because the only multilateral organisation for nuclear verification, the IAEA has an important function to play in verifying the DPRK's nuclear programme," he stated. The European Union has also described inside a statement that the developments in North Korea had been of concern and urged Pyongyang to quit its nuclear actions and "give IAEA inspectors access to all its nuclear amenities and related documentation without additional delay."

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