S. Korea Removes ‘Enemy’ Reference to N. Korea in New Defense Report

S. Korea Removes ‘Enemy’ Reference to N. Korea in New Defense Report

South Korea has dropped a reference to North Korea as its enemy in the militarys updated policy document, reflecting President Moon Jae-ins initiative in achieving dtente with Pyongyang, reports VOA News.

The Defense Ministry has labeled the North as enemy in its biennial policy document since 2010, when 50 South Koreans were killed in separate attacks on an island and a naval vessel blamed on Pyongyang.

The absence of the enemy label in the 2018 document, published Tuesday, is likely to anger conservatives in South Korea, who say that President Moons efforts to build better relations with the regime of Kim Jong Un is undermining the Souths defense posture.

Kims New Years Day speech in 2017 offering to send a contingent of North Korean athletes to the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics in South Korea set off a series of diplomatic breakthroughs, including three summits with President Moon.

The newly established diplomatic ties have also led to a set of confidence-building measures, including dismantling dozens of all armed guard posts and landmines in the so-called Joint Security Area located within the 250-kilometer demilitarized zone (DMZ), where troops from both Koreas are face to face.

The South Korean Defense Ministry paper warns that North Koreas weapons of mass destruction, a reference to its nuclear and missile program, continues to pose a threat to peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula.

The Defense Ministry says North Korea maintains an active duty force of 1.28 million troops, compared with the Souths 599,000 active duty troops. The regime either possesses or is developing 14 different types of ballistic missiles, including five intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) with a range of more than 5,500 kilometers. The North also owns a considerable amount of highly enriched uranium, along with 50 kilograms of weaponized plutonium.