Lifting missile curbs on S. Korea
'complementary' to U.S. regional deterrence efforts: senator Yonhap
20210605
SEOUL, June 5 (Yonhap) -- The recent lifting of U.S. curbs on South Korea's missile development would be "complementary" to America's regional deterrence efforts, a U.S. senator said Saturday, amid North Korea's angry reactions and China's apparent misgivings over the move.
Sen. Tammy
Duckworth (D-IL) made the remarks during a meeting with reporters in Seoul,
stressing the U.S. presence in the Indo-Pacific
region is to support "international rules and norms," which
Washington believes have been challenged by an assertive China.
Duckworth
and her fellow senators, Christopher Coons
(D-DE), and Dan Sullivan (R-AL), were here for talks with senior Seoul officials
and others on a mission to strengthen the bilateral alliance.
"I
think that just because we lift the cap doesn't mean that South Korea should
immediately go out and throw a lot of money into developing these new long
range missiles," Duckworth said.
"I
think it's complementary to the work that we're doing here and I think it shows the maturity of the partnership and of the security alliance," she added.
After last
month's summit between President Moon Jae-in and U.S. President Joe Biden, Moon announced the
lifting of the guidelines barring South Korea from developing or possessing
ballistic missiles with a maximum range greater than 800 kilometers.
Speculation
has since persisted that Seoul's ability to field
longer-range missiles could enhance U.S. security interests in the
context of an intensifying Sino-U.S. rivalry, though
Seoul framed it as a restoration of "missile sovereignty."
North Korean
state media denounced the removal of the restrictions as a "stark
reminder" of Washington's hostile approach to Pyongyang, while Chinese
Ambassador to Seoul Xing Haiming has warned "China
would not sit still should its national interests be harmed."
On
engagement with North Korea, Coons said that the U.S. has done "everything
we reasonably could and the ball is now in their court."
"They
have to show some interest and some engagement," Coons said. "I think
we've been clear that we would welcome further conversation, but we can't
overextend ourselves in that direction."
After a
months long policy review, the Biden administration said that it would pursue a
calibrated, practical approach toward the goal of the complete denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula.
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