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NUKEWARS
North Korea threatens 'sacred war' on South
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) June 29, 2011

North Korea threatened on Wednesday to launch "a retaliatory sacred war" against South Korea for alleged slander as the two sides held rare talks on a stalled joint tourism project.

A Pyongyang government spokesman accused the South's frontline army units of displaying slogans slandering the North's "army, system and dignity" and said they are "little short of a clear declaration of war".

The spokesman, in a statement carried by the official news agency, vowed to respond to any provocations with a "merciless retaliatory sacred war".

The North's military command made a similar threat in a separate statement, vowing retaliation for insults to the country's political leadership.

The South's Hankyoreh newspaper Monday quoted some of the slogans as reading "Let's stick swords and guns into the hearts of North Korean enemy army!" and "A club is the only medicine for a mad dog!"

The North made similar threats when South Korean reservists were found to be using pictures of Pyongyang's ruling Kim dynasty as rifle-range targets.

That practice has since been stopped.

Tensions have been high for well over a year, since the South accused the North of torpedoing a warship in March 2010, killing 46 sailors.

Pyongyang denied the charge but went on to shell a border island last November, killing four South Koreans including two civilians.

The latest warning came as 12 South Korean government officials and businesspeople travelled to a jointly run mountain resort in the North to discuss the ownership of South Korean assets there.

The South's unification ministry, which handles cross-border affairs, said the talks ended without any "substantial" discussions because the North unilaterally explained its own position.

Mount Kumgang opened in 1998 as a symbol of reconciliation and helped the impoverished communist state to earn tens of millions of dollars a year.

But the South suspended visits after a North Korean soldier shot dead a Seoul tourist who had strayed into a restricted military zone in 2008.

Last year the North seized or sealed off several South Korean properties in protest at the failure to restart the tours.

On June 17, Pyongyang warned it would dispose of properties in the zone, and asked South Korean parties to visit Kumgang by June 30 to discuss the process.

The ministry said the North should respect all agreements with private businesses and with Seoul's government, and protect the ownership rights of the South's firms.




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South Korea to open cyber warfare school
Seoul (AFP) June 29, 2011 - South Korea's military will create a cyber warfare school to help combat growing Internet attacks from North Korea, an official said Wednesday.

The army has teamed up with Korea University to open in 2012 the new cyber-defence school, which will admit 30 students a year for a four-year course.

Courses include how to break malicious Internet codes, ways to psychologically prepare for cyber warfare and other IT technologies to guard against potential attacks, an army spokesman told AFP.

"We... seek to nurture warriors to fight in cyber warfare amid growing cyber-terror threats from North Korea and to secure a stable supply of specialists," the army said in a statement.

The military will pay tuition for the students who upon graduation will become army officers required to work in online warfare-related units for the following seven years, the spokesman said.

The North reportedly maintains elite hacker units, prompting the South to set up a specific military command to combat them.

In May South Korean prosecutors said the North's military intelligence launched a cyber attack that paralysed operations at one of the country's largest banks.

North Korea's defence ministry denied the allegation and called it "absurd".

Seoul also accused Pyongyang of staging cyber attacks on websites of major South Korean government agencies and financial institutions in March this year and in July 2009.

Pyongyang also rejected those allegations, accusing Seoul of inventing the charges to raise tensions.





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NUKEWARS
N. Korea scorns South's offer of nuclear talks
Seoul (AFP) June 28, 2011
North Korea Tuesday poured scorn on South Korea's proposal for bilateral nuclear talks, even after Seoul dropped its demand that Pyongyang first apologise for two deadly border incidents. Its latest comments appeared to dim hopes of reviving a long-stalled six-party forum which is trying to persuade Pyongyang to give up its nuclear weapons in return for energy aid and security and diplomatic ... read more


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