S. Korea to stage firing drills from border island - Action News
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S. Korea to stage firing drills from border island

South Korea says it will conduct artillery drills similar to ones that prompted North Korea to shell a front-line island last month.

South Korea said Thursday it will conduct artillery drills similar to ones that prompted North Korea to shell a front-line island last month a move that risks further confrontation even as an American governor travelled to the North in a diplomatic effort to cool tensions.

Former North Korean defectors and South Korean conservative activists look at houses destroyed by North Korean shelling as they visit the Yeonpyeong Island, South Korea, on Thursday. ((Ahn Young-joon/Associated Press))

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who has frequently acted as an unofficial envoy to the North, arrived Thursday in Pyongyang after telling reporters in Beijing he expected to be given some sort of message by North Korea.

Meanwhile, in South Korea, the Joint Chiefs of Staffs said in a statement that marines based on Yeonpyeong Island, a tiny fishing community with military bases near the Koreas' disputed sea border, will stage one-day live-fire drills some time between Saturday and Tuesday. Weather and other factors will determine the exact time.

Similar artillery exercises Nov. 23 were met with a rain of North Korean shells that killed two marines and two construction workers, destroyed homes and shops and raised fears of renewed war between the rivals. The North says the waters around the island are its territory. The assault was the first by the North to target a civilian area since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War.

The South Korean statement said the impending Yeonpyeong drills are part of "routine, justified" exercises that the South regularly conducts to protect its islands off the west coast. Representatives of the U.S.-led UN Command that oversees the armistice that ended the Korean War will observe the drills on the island, which is just 11 kilometres from North Korean shores.

Marines will fire artillery away from North Korea, toward waters southwest of the island.

"We are holding the drills with full preparation to deal with" any attacks from the North, a Joint Chiefs of Staff officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity, citing department rules.

U.S. governorvisits North Korea

Shortly after the South announced the drills, Richardson arrived in North Korea on a flight from Beijing, according to China's official Xinhua News Agency.

In Beijing, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg held closed-door meetings with Chinese State Councilor Dai Bingguo. Beijing's top foreign policy official returned last week from talks in Pyongyang with North Korean leader Kim Jong-il. China has come under growing pressure to push ally North Korea to change its behavior.

A former United Nations ambassador, Richardson has often been an unofficial diplomatic troubleshooter, including missions to secure the release of hostages in Sudan, Iraq and North Korea.

"My hope is that they provide messages that will lower tensions on the Korean peninsula. My message to them will be we need peace, we need to stop some of these aggressive actions, especially with respect to South Korea," Richardson said at the Beijing airport before flying to Pyongyang.

Richardson said he does not know who he will meet yet, but said he had requested a visit to the North's main nuclear facility at Yongbyon. The Democratic governor, who leaves office at the end of the month, was invited to North Korea by Kim Kye Gwan, who has served as the country's chief negotiator in stalled six-nation nuclear disarmament talks. Richardson is expected to return to Beijing on Monday.

The U.S. State Department has said Richardson isn't delivering a message to North Korea for the U.S. government. However, Richardson's contacts with North Korean officials may provide insights for diplomats trying to persuade North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

Pyongyang is believed to be seeking bilateral talks with the United States before returning to six-nation nuclear disarmament negotiations hosted by China. Those talks also include South Korea, Japan and Russia.

North Korea's Foreign Ministry, in a statement carried Thursday by the country's official Korean Central News Agency, said: "Though we support all proposals for dialogue, including the six-way talks, out of desire to prevent a war on the Korean peninsula and realize denuclearization, we will never beg for dialogue."

The ministry said North Korea wants peace so it can secure foreign investments and build a powerful and prosperous country in 2012, the 100th anniversary of the birth of the country's founder, Kim Il-sung, father of Kim Jong-il.

The ministry also accused the United States of avoiding proposals for dialogue and creating a warlike atmosphere on the Korean peninsula.

Pyongyang's main Rodong Sinmun newspaper, in a commentary carried by KCNA, blamed the tensions on South Korea's conservative government and its "policy of confrontation" with the North, and said deepening distrust is "bound to lead to military clashes."