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Politics : Electoral College 2000 - Ahead of the Curve -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Venditâ„¢ who wrote (4853)12/5/2000 2:37:50 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 6710
 
On the world stage...hope someone is minding the store..N. Korea renews buildup, deploys
missiles

worldtribune.com

SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Tuesday, December 5, 2000

TOKYO — North Korea has resumed its military buildup along the border
with the south.

South Korean officials said Pyongyang has deployed artillery units along the
border despite a year-long reconciliation effort. They said North Korea has
also reorganized army divisions and is deploying short-range missiles.

South Korean Defense Minister Cho Sung-Tae convened his military
commanders on Monday to discuss the North Korean military threat. Cho,
who plans to meet his North Korean counterpart later this month, rejected
any reduction of the defense budget and called on the government and military
to boost preparations for any attack by Pyongyang.

"Whatever changes happen in inter-Korean relations and security our basic
mission will not change at all," Cho said. "The military should maintain tight
preparedness as the last vanguard of our national interest. North Korea's
military strength and threat, as always, is top priority for the military."

The meeting was held on Monday as the Defense Ministry issued a report on
the North Korean buildup. The report calls Pyongyang as the main enemy of
the south.

The report said Pyongyang has deployed 500 short-range missiles as well as
artillery along the 150-kilometer border. North Korea has also increased
military aircraft over the last year -- from 850 to 870 -- and added four new
divisions, bringing the number to 67.

In response, South Korea has acquired 20 fighters and 10 support planes.
The report said the United States would deploy up to 690,000 troops on the
Korean peninsula in case of an invasion from the north. Currently, the United
States has 37,000 troops.

"The latest Time Phased Forces Deployment Data for any contingency on the
Korean Peninsula is comprised of 690,000 soldiers, 160 navy ships and
1,600 planes," the report said.

In an unrelated issue, Taiwan has reportedly succeeded in developing the
supersonic Hsiungfeng III anti-ship missile to defend against China. The
Taipei-based China Times said the missile passed several tests and will soon
be ready for production.

Tuesday, December 5, 2000