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China, Russia slam installment of US missile system in South Korea

 

China and Russia have voiced serious concern about the controversial transportation of an advanced US missile system to South Korea, drawing attention to the destabilizing effect of the deployment on an already fraught situation on the Korean Peninsula.

According to South Korean media, the long-planned deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) to South Korea began on Wednesday with the arrival of radar equipment and other hardware.

Reacting at a daily news briefing in Beijing on Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang called on the US and South Korea to halt the deployment operations.

The spokesman said Beijing had conveyed its serious concern to the US and South Korea over the matter.

Tensions on the Korean Peninsula have significantly spiked in recent weeks. The US, concerned by North Korea’s rapidly-developing missile and military nuclear programs, has sent a strike force and submarine to the peninsula. Pyongyang has said it is ready for war. The two sides have been increasingly trading threats of military action against one another.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov delivers a speech during the annual Moscow Conference on International Security (MCIS), in Moscow, Russia, April 26, 2017. (Photo by Reuters)

Referring to those tensions on Wednesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned against “heavy-handed approaches,” which he said would have many “catastrophic consequences” for the region.

“It is obvious that heavy-handed approaches that are beginning to be mentioned publicly are fraught with catastrophic consequences for the Korean Peninsula and the whole of Northeast Asia,” he told the annual Moscow Conference on International Security (MCIS).

Specifically referring to the deployment of the THAAD, the Russian foreign minister said, “An extremely destabilizing factor remains the forced deployment of US THAAD systems, a component of the US global missile defense, in the south of the peninsula.”

Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier General Hossein Dehqan (2nd-R) attends the annual Moscow Conference on International Security (MCIS), in Moscow, Russia, April 26, 2017. (Photo by Reuters)

Also present at the MCIS was Iranian Defense Minister Brigadier General Hossein Dehqan, who delivered a speech at the event.

Dehqan used his speech to warn against the escalation of tensions on the Korean Peninsula. “We are of the opinion that if the Korean Peninsula crisis slides toward war, it would have destructive and global consequences,” he said.

This photo taken on March 18, 2017 shows an aerial view of a former golf course that is now to be used as a base for the installation of the US THAAD system, in Seongju, South Korea. (By AFP)

The start of the operations to deploy the THAAD at a time of increased tensions specifically serves to complicate the situation.

The US missile system is being installed in Seongju in South Korea’s North Gyeongsang Province.

Ten protesters injured in South Korea

The plans to install THAAD have long faced opposition from South Korean people, as well.

Scuffles broke out between police and protesters in Seongju on Wednesday as pieces of equipment from the THAAD missile system began arriving at the designated site.

An organizer of local protests against THAAD in Seongju told Reuters that more than 10 protesters were injured during the clashes with police.

The protesters threw water bottles as military trailers carrying large units, including what appeared to be launch canisters, drove into the planned battery site.

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