11th hour diplomatic mission underway to avoid war:
US to deploy fleet of drones
to region
April 6, 2013 – NORTH KOREA - Tensions remain high on the Korean Peninsula, amid
reports the US has deployed an unmanned spy plane to Japan to boost its
surveillance after North Korea readied missile launchers on its east coast. The
Global Hawk will be stationed at the US airbase in Misawa, northern Japan, in
the first ever deployment of the aircraft in the country, the Sankei Shimbun
reported, quoting government sources. The US military informed Japan last month
about plans to deploy the plane between June and September but has brought the
date forward. It comes after North Korea warned foreign diplomats they may not
be safe in the country if war breaks out. Pyongyang asked foreign embassies
whether they were considering evacuating staff, saying the government could not
guarantee their safety in the event of conflict from April 10. The British
Foreign Office dismissed the warning as “rhetoric.” However, an urgent
international effort to defuse the situation is under way. The heads of EU
missions are to meet to hammer out a common position on the crisis, while the US
works its diplomatic channels to resolve the stand-off with Pyongyang. US
Secretary of State John Kerry has been holding talks with officials in South
Korea, as well as China - historically North Korea's ally - to see if the
Chinese can put any more pressure on North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un to back
down. Reporting from the South Korean capital Seoul, Sky's Asia Correspondent
Mark Stone, said: “In the skies above the Korean Peninsula there are spy planes
operating. “There will be drones - American drones - operating before long from
a base in Japan. They are trying to get as much of a sense as possible of what
it is that Kim Jong-Un is doing on the ground with his weaponry. We know he has
some pretty sophisticated weaponry. There are artillery rounds just over the
border. They could in theory hit Seoul. That's a big concern for South Korea.”
–Sky News
No comments:
Post a Comment