South Korea: Talks with US on management of nukes underway
South Korea confirmed Tuesday that Seoul and Washington are
discussing its involvement in U.S. nuclear weapons management in the face of intensifying
North Korean nuclear threats, after President Joe Biden denied that the allies
were discussing joint nuclear exercises.
The purported difference came after North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un entered the new year with a vow to mass-produce battlefield nuclear
weapons targeting South Korea and introduce a more powerful intercontinental
ballistic missile capable of striking the mainland U.S. Some experts say Kim
would eventually aim to use his enlarged weapons arsenal to wrest outside
concessions like sanctions relief.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said in a newspaper
interview published Monday that the two countries were pushing for a joint
planning and training involving U.S. nuclear assets and that the United States
responded positively about the idea.
Asked by a reporter later at the White House about whether
the two countries were discussing joint nuclear exercises, Biden replied, “No.”
Yoon’s top adviser for press affairs, Kim Eun-hye, issued a
statement Tuesday saying that Seoul and Washington “are discussing an
intel-sharing, a joint planning and subsequent joint execution plans over the
management of U.S. nuclear assets in response to North Korea’s nuclear
(threats).”
Kim said Biden likely answered “no” because a reporter
tersely asked him about nuclear exercises without providing any background
information.
In the Chosun Ilbo interview, Yoon said that while the U.S.
nuclear weapons belong to the U.S., planning, intel-sharing and exercises
involving them must be jointly conducted with South Korea. He said he finds it
difficult to assure his people of a security guarantee with the current levels
of U.S. security commitment.
South Korea has no nuclear weapons and is under the
protection of a U.S. “nuclear umbrella,” which guarantees a devastating
American response in the event of an attack on its ally. But some experts
question the effectiveness of such a security commitment, saying the decision
to use U.S. nuclear weapons lies with the U.S. president.
Yoon’s office didn’t provide many details about his
government’s discussion with the United States. Some observers say South Korea
is seeking to obtain a greater role on U.S. decision-making process on the
deployment of its nuclear assets in times of tensions with North Korea.
Kim Taewoo, a former head of Seoul’s Korea Institute for
National Unification, said the reported South Korea-U.S. discussion likely
“benchmarked a NATO-style nuclear-sharing arrangement” that allows NATO member
states’ warplanes to carry U.S. nuclear weapons. He said the discussion still
appears to be falling short of the NATO arrangement because possible nuclear
exercises between the two countries would likely be South Korean air force
aircraft escorting U.S. aircraft simulating nuclear strikes during joint
drills.
“North Korea would take this sensitively. (South Korea and
the U.S.) are discussing this to get North Korea to take this sensitively …
because that can be a deterrence against North Korea,” Kim Taewoo said.
He said South Korea and the United States are likely using
unofficial channels to discuss the topic. That allows South Korea to claim it’s
discussing the issue with the U.S. at the same time it allows Washington to
deny that, he said.
Last year, North Korea performed a record number of weapons
tests by launching a variety of ballistic missiles capable of reaching the U.S.
mainland and its allies South Korea and Japan. In September, North Korea also
adopted a new law authorizing the preemptive use of its bombs in a broad range
of cases, including non-war scenarios.
After their annual meeting in November, the defense chiefs
of the United States and South Korea issued a joint statement reaffirming the
U.S. commitment to providing extended deterrence to South Korea and deploying
U.S. strategic assets in a timely and coordinated manner as necessary and
identify new steps to reinforce deterrence against North Korean threats. The
statement also carried their agreement to bolster the alliance’s information-sharing,
joint planning and execution.
During a recently ended ruling party meeting, Kim Jong Un
ordered the “exponential” expansion of his country’s nuclear arsenal and the
mass-production of tactical nuclear weapons missioned with attacking South
Korea, as well as the development of a new ICBM tasked with having a “quick
nuclear counterstrike” capability — a weapon he needs to strike the mainland,
North Korea’s state media reported Sunday.