E-MAIL THIS LINK
To: 

VOA: New South Korean Defense Paper Softens Description of North
South Korea's defense department has updated a key White Paper dealing with North Korea to reflect a more conciliatory attitude - while leaving no doubts that it would try to deter any possible attack.
"Pak, what's a nice word for 'nutbag'?"
The document, released Friday, drops 10-year-old references to North Korea as the "main enemy" of South Korea, instead describing the Communist state as a "direct military threat."
"We got millions o' enemies, and you is only a few dozen!"
The revisions to the White Paper, the first in four years, reflect South Korea's policy of seeking to engage the North peacefully. At the same time, the document says the United States would commit 690,000 military personnel, supported by about 2,000 war planes should North Korea attack. The paper says that commitment would require 70 percent of all U.S. Marines, half of the U.S. Air Force, and 40 percent of the U.S. Navy, plus thousands of Army troops, to defend South Korea.
On the other hand, NKor wouldn't be a threat anymore when we were done.
Kim Yong-kyu, a spokesman for U.S. Forces in Korea, confirms that contingency plan, but says the troops would not arrive at once. "This reinforcement number [would] not be deployed at one time," he said. "They have it in three stages." The span of time for the three stages, says Mr. Kim, would depend on the nature and intensity of the conflict. The numbers outlined in the paper would be more than four times the U.S. force presence in Iraq. Kim Tae-woo, a senior fellow at the Korean Institute for Defense Analyses, says that is because a conflict with North Korea would be extremely demanding. "The North Korean military forces are much larger and stronger," he said.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis 2005-02-04
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=55580