Seoul warns North Korea over buffer zone pact if it ‘violates’ South Korea’s airspace again
- Repeated artillery and drone incursions by North Korea have prompted hawks in President Yoon Suk-yeol’s party to call for scrapping a 2018 deal
- An analyst said ending the agreement would increase the chance of heightened military tensions and ‘an actual clash in border areas’
The deal, struck during a period of high-profile diplomacy at a summit in Pyongyang, aimed to reduce military tensions along the heavily fortified border.
At the time, the two sides agreed to “cease various military exercises aimed at each other along the military demarcation line”, but Pyongyang began repeatedly violating the deal last year.
On Wednesday, Yoon instructed his security aides “to consider suspending the military agreement if the North carries out another provocation violating our territory,” spokeswoman Kim Eun-hye told reporters.
Yoon also called for “a large-scale production of small-size drones that are hard to be detected by the end of the year” and the creation of a multipurpose drone unit for an “overwhelming counteroffensive capability”.
The North Korean drone incursion, the first such incident in five years, prompted an apology from Seoul’s defence minister after the military failed to shoot down any of the unmanned aircraft despite scrambling jets for a five-hour operation.
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Scrapping the 2018 deal would “increase the chance of heightened military tensions and an actual clash in border areas”, said Hong Min of the Korea Institute for National Unification.
Despite Pyongyang violating the deal, the agreement still helped with “preventing a major military clash,” he said.
“It will be a much different story if Yoon puts an official, political end to the agreement”.