North Korea vowed Sunday to bolster its "self-defensive
deterrence" saying a military exercise launched by South
Korea and the United States could jepardise nuclear disarmament
talks.
"If the aggressors ignite a war on this land, the army
and people of the DPRK (North Korea) will resolutely retaliate
against them with merciless deadly blows," the Korean National
Peace Committee said in a statement.
North Korea will bolster its "self-defensive deterrence
for defending the dignity and sovereignty of the Korean nation
to cope with the provocative moves of the US and south Korean
warmongers," it said.
The North has used the word "self-defensive deterrence"
in referring to atomic bombs since its nuclear test last October.
The warning came as the week-long RSOI (Reception, Staging,
Onward Movement and Integration) and Foal Eagle exercise began
across South Korea Sunday.
The allies say the exercise is purely defensive.
But North Korea has accused Washington of carrying out the
exercise while negotiations have been under way with Pyongyang
as part of six-nation talks over the North's nuclear programmes.
"This saber-rattling just launched behind the curtain
of 'dialogue' and 'peace' is a very rude act proving their utter
lack of good faith," the committee said.
The exercise is "harmful to the settlement of the nuclear
issue and peace of the Korean Peninsula and driving the situation
to a phase of confrontation and war," it said.
The committee also warned the exercise would drive inter-Korean
relations to collapse.
The exercise focuses on a mock battle aimed at preparing for
the sudden arrival of US reinforcements, US officials said earlier.
It also features anti-commando operations and computer war games.
As part of the exercise, the USS Ronald Reagan plus a cruiser
and two destroyers have joined tens of thousands of US and South
Korean soldiers.
Outside a sprawling US military compound in Seoul, riot police
blocked a march by about 1,000 South Korean anti-war activists
who chanted slogans such as "Stop war games!"
"The exercise threatens peace on the Korean peninsula
as it comes amid international efforts to denuclearise the peninsula
following the February 13 six-party agreement," the protesters
said in a statement.
The United States has stationed tens of thousands of troops
in the South since the Korean war began in June 1950 with an
invasion by the North.
Currently some 29,500 US troops are stationed here to help
680,000 South Korean forces face up to North Korea's 1.1-million-strong
military.