09 August 2016

News Story: S.Korean president perplexed at anti-THAAD lawmakers leaving for China

SEOUL, Aug. 8 (Xinhua) -- South Korean President Park Geun-hye appears perplexed at six first-term lawmakers of the main opposition Minju Party who left for China as they are against the deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD).

The six anti-THAAD lawmakers reportedly left for Beijing on Monday morning to exchange opinions with Chinese experts about the THAAD deployment in South Korea. During the three-day stay, they are set to hold a meeting with South Koreans living in China and South Korean correspondence there.

The lawmakers were scheduled to meet South Korean ambassador to China Kim Jang-soo right after arriving in Beijing, but the meeting was reportedly canceled as President Park criticized their visit to China.

During her meeting with senior presidential secretaries on Monday, Park denounced their visit as it split public opinion further over the THAAD deployment. Park said she is ready to receive any criticism as she believes THAAD is aimed at protecting South Koreans from the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (DPRK)s nuclear and missile threats.

Her comments were based on a wrong belief that THAAD can be a cure-all. Seoul and Washington agreed early last month to install one THAAD battery, composed of six mobile launchers, 48 interceptors and an X-band radar and a fire control system, by the end of next year.

The THAAD battery is incapable of fending off all DPRK's missiles targeting South Korea, while excluding Seoul and its adjacent metropolitan areas from the protection coverage as the battery is to be installed in Seongju county, some 250 km southeast of the capital city. THAAD interceptors have a maximum range of 200 km.

It is absurd to claim that the THAAD battery is aimed at defending from the DPRKs nuclear and missile threats as South Koreas most populous regions are excluded from protection. Rather, it indicates South Korea joining the U.S. Pivot-to-Asia strategy to supervise and check China and Russia.

THAAD in South Korea triggered strong oppositions from China and Russia as the X-band radar can peer into Chinese and Russian territories. Seoul claims it will adopt the radar with a detectable range of 600-800 km, but it can be converted at any time into the radar spotting at least 2,000 km.

As the THAAD battery is to be operated by U.S. Forces Korea (USFK), South Koreas military will have no right to intervene in the U.S. operations and will never know what is happening inside the U.S. missile base.

Read the full story at Xinhua