05 February 2013

News Story: S. Korea, U.S. Hold Naval Drill Under Nuclear Test Threat


SEOUL — South Korea and the United States launched a joint naval exercise involving a U.S. nuclear submarine Feb. 4, as tensions rose on the Korean peninsula ahead of an expected nuclear test by North Korea.

A defense ministry spokesman confirmed the three-day drill — condemned as a “war-mongering” exercise by North Korea — was underway in the East Sea (Sea of Japan) off the southeastern South Korean port of Pohang. Although South Korean military officials stressed the drill was scheduled before the North threatened to detonate its third nuclear device, the presence of the submarine has been seen as a warning to Pyongyang.

The San Francisco, armed with Tomahawk cruise missiles, is joined in the drill by a 9,800-ton Aegis destroyer, the Shiloh.

“The exercise includes at-sea operating training, detecting and tracking a submarine, anti-air and anti-ship live fire training and anti-missile training,” the Yonhap news agency quoted one military official as saying.

The drill comes as the North has ramped up daily threats of a nuclear test in response to expanded U.N. sanctions imposed after its long-range rocket launch in December.

Read the full story at DefenseNews