to cancel artillery drills planned for the same island the North
shelled in November, pledging it would answer any provocation with a
strike even harsher than last month’s deadly attack.
Sometime between Saturday and Tuesday,
The North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency reported Friday that officials in
warning that further drills on the island would bring “unpredictable
self-defensive strikes.” The notice added that “the intensity and scope
of the strike will be more serious than the
dismissed the drills as an effort to “save the face of the South Korean
military, which met a disgraceful fiasco” in the shelling of
Yeonpyeong, the news agency reported.
But
pledged on Friday to carry out the exercises, which Defense Ministry
officials characterized as part of “routine, justified” exercises for
its own defense.
Many fear that the newest belligerence from
“What you don’t want to have happen out of that is for us to lose control of the escalation,” Gen.
The Obama administration has supported
But in
refrain from the planned firing to prevent further escalation of
tension in the Korean peninsula,” according to a ministry bulletin.
“I think these plans are counterproductive and very dangerous,”
deputy head of the foreign relations committee in the lower house of
the Russian parliament, said in an interview. “You simply can’t scare
these . . . fanatics with a mere demonstration of force or, in other
words, with a provocation like this.”
The most recent back and forth between the Koreas came as
Richardson, who has in the past served as unofficial envoy to
“My objective is to see if we can reduce the tension in the Korean peninsula,” he said upon arriving in
U.S. officials stressed that Richardson, who was invited to
was not acting in any official capacity, but many analysts hoped that
his talks with officials there might help persuade the North to finally
give up its nuclear weapons program.
U.S. diplomats also fanned out across the region
Friday in an effort to lessen the likelihood of renewed hostilities.
Deputy Secretary of State
on the North’s nuclear program, met Friday with South Korean nuclear
envoy Wi Sung-lac.
Both North and South claim ownership of Yeonpyeong,
a tiny island about seven miles from the North Korean coast and home to
fishermen and a South Korean military base.
In its missive sent to
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