North Korea forces Japan and South Korea to sign landmark defence deal

November 15, 2016

International Business Times:

South Korea and Japan agreed a landmark deal to share military intelligence, a move that goes a long way in erasing the bitterness over the past in the face of advancing threat from common foe – rogue nation North Korea.

The deal was opposed vehemently in South Korea where sentiments against Japan are high owing the nation’s militaristic past and the imperial Japan’s occupation of the peninsula in the first half of 20th century.

The General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) will be formally signed at the of this month.

In 2012, Seoul and Tokyo were close to signing a similar deal but it was scrapped after intense domestic opposition in South Korea

Japan’s foreign ministry said both sides “reached a working agreement and conducted a provisional signing.” “We will continue making final arrangements toward the official signing,” the statement said.

“It is important that Japan and South Korea cooperate to deal with North Korea’s nuclear and missile issues,” government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said.

The deal with Japan has come at a time when South Korean President Park Geun-Hye is fighting for her political life after a controversy relating to her long-time confidante’s political involvements rocked the government.

The opposition Democratic Party, which seeks her resignation over the Choi Soon Sil controversy, said the move to sign a deal to share defence intelligence with Japan is unpatriotic, humiliating and not accepted by history.”

“Japan, which once occupied the Korean peninsula and enslaved Koreans with its military might, is still not admitting a lot of its past atrocities,” the party said….

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