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Politics

China: Stop military tests in Korean peninsula

March 8, 2017

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi says this could prevent a "head-on collision" amid growing tension. Meanwhile, the UN Security Council condemned Pyongyang's latest launches, promising further measures.

https://p.dw.com/p/2Ynun
Nordkorea Raketentest
Image: picture alliance/AP Photo/A. Young-Joon

China urges N.Korea to stop missile tests

Amid growing tension in the Korean peninsula, China proposed on Wednesday that North Korea could suspend its nuclear and missile activities in exchange for a halt of the military drills held by the US and South Korea. This could be a first step to prevent a "head-on collision," Foreign Minister Wang Yi said.

"The two sides are like two accelerating trains coming toward each other with neither side willing to give way," Wang told reporters. "Our priority now is to flash the red light and apply the brakes on both trains."

Tension grows in East Asia after North Korean missile launch

"This 'suspension for suspension' can help us break out of the security dilemma and bring the parties back to the negotiating table," he said.

Pyongyang shot four ballistic missiles towards US bases stationed in Japan on Monday, with all four hitting the ocean, three close to the coast in exclusively Japanese held waters. 

Last week, Seoul and Washington began their annual joint military exercises. While the two countries see these drills as purely defensive, North Korea views them as a provocation and a preparation for a war against the country.

A planned missile defense system in South Korea is also the source of friction in Northeast Asia. The US Pacific Command announced on Monday that Americans had begun deploying the so-called Terminal High Altitude Defense System (THAAD). THAAD is meant to shoot down North Korean missiles aimed at its Southern neighbor. Not only Pyongyang opposes the joint project by the US and South Korea, but also Bejing. China believes that the system could reach into its territory and thus threaten its security interests.

China Außenminister Wang Yi in Peking
Wang Yi called for a stop to missile launches and military drills in the Korean peninsulaImage: Reuters/J. Lee

UN: 'Increasingly destabilizing behavior'

On Tuesday, the UN Security Council passed a statement that strongly condemned North Korea's recent ballistic missile launches, calling them a "grave violation" of UN resolutions banning the country from developing missile technology. The panel expressed serious concern over Pyongyang's "increasingly destabilizing behavior."

"The members of the Security Council further regretted that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is diverting resources to the pursuit of ballistic missiles while Democratic People's Republic of Korea citizens have great unmet needs," the paper said.

The UN statement urged all 193 member states "to redouble their efforts to implement" the sanctions against North Korea. The Security Council vowed to closely monitor the situation and to "take further significant measures."

Starting in 2006, the UN has imposed increasingly tougher restrictions, including an arms embargo, on the Kim regime to punish the country for developing nuclear weapons and missiles.

Südkorea US-Raketenabwehrsystem THAAD
On Monday, the US released photos showing the trucks carrying parts needed to set up the THAAD missile defense systemImage: picture-alliance/AP Photo/U.S. Force Korea

Briefing set for Wednesday

The council will hold a closed door meeting later on Wednesday to be briefed on the latest North Korean missile launches.

The UN condemnation was approved unanimously by all 15 members of the Security Council, in spite of heightened tension between the US and China, two of the five permanent members on the Security Council, over THAAD.

A recent report by a UN panel of experts raised questions about Bejing's commitment to the sanctions. According to the paper, North Korea set up front companies in other countries to circumvent the restrictions, most notably in China and Malaysia.

mb/bw (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)

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