SKorea Won’t Let North Korea Use Nuclear Test To Win Concessions

south_koreaSouth Korea’s president said Saturday his country won’t give in to North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats, while Pyongyang accused Seoul of sending patrol boats into its territorial waters — the scene of past bloody naval clashes.

The North’s official Korean Central News Agency alleged the patrol boats were sailing into North Korean waters daily around the rivals’ disputed western sea border. The Korean-language report warned that aggressors would be dealt “merciless punishment that will be beyond imagination.”

The claim was rejected by Seoul, which two days ago alleged one of the North’s patrol boats violated its sea border in the same area. The boat turned back without incident after a 50-minute standoff with the South’s naval ships, the South Korean military said.

The disputed waters — where deadly clashes occurred in 1999 and 2002 — are a potential flash point for the rivals. Many fear a minor dispute could quickly escalate into a major confrontation, especially with tensions soaring after the North’s May 25 nuclear blast and recent missile tests.

Earlier Saturday, South Korean President Lee Myung-bak delivered a stern warning to the North in a nationally televised Memorial Day speech honoring the country’s war dead at Seoul’s National Cemetery.

“I would like to make it clear that there will be no compromise against things that threaten our people and security,” Lee said.

Lee’s words echoed those of U.S. officials, who have also said the North’s former tactics of using military threats to win much-needed food and energy aid would no longer work. Washington is considering punishing North Korea with its own financial sanctions, apart from whatever the U.N. might decide to adopt.

At the U.N., lengthy closed-door negotiations about sanctions appeared to be close to an end. The measure was being worked out by five veto-wielding Security Council nations — the U.S., China, Russia, Britain and France — along with Japan and South Korea.

Nuclear Sites Revealed

nuclear-sites-revealed_The US government accidentally made public a secret report detailing its nuclear sites, programs and even exact locations of nuclear stockpiles, The New York Times reported on Wednesday. “The federal government mistakenly made public (the) 266-page report”, The Times reported noting that the blunder was revealed on Monday in an online newsletter about federal secrecy.

“That set off a debate among nuclear experts about what dangers, if any, the disclosures posed. It also prompted a flurry of investigations in Washington into why the document had been made public,” the Times noted, saying that by late Tuesday “after inquiries from The New York Times, the document was withdrawn from a Government Printing Office Web site.”

Several analysts said the security breach was not devastating “given that the general outlines of the most sensitive information were already known publicly,” the report said. “These screw-ups happen,” the Times quoted John Deutch, a former director of central intelligence now a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as saying. “It’s going further than I would have gone but doesn’t look like a serious breach.”

The information was described as “confidential but not classified,” the Times added. David Albright, of the Institute for Science and International Security here, told the paper however that making the locations of nuclear material available “can provide thieves or terrorists inside information that can help them seize the material, which is why that kind of data is not given out.”