North Korea on Saturday warned South Korea of “merciless retaliatory strikes”, a day after the South fired warning shots at North Korean boats near their disputed sea border.
The North’s military General Staff said that from now on it would open fire without warning at any South Korean ships if they intrude “even 0.001 millimetres” into disputed waters in the Yellow Sea.
It called for the South to apologise for the “reckless military provocation”, which it said aimed to “drive the situation in the volatile hotspot to the brink of explosion”.
“From now on, we will open direct fire on any warship of the South Korean puppet forces without warning, if it intrudes... even 0.001 mm in the hotspot of the West Sea,” it was quoted as saying in a statement carried by Pyongyang’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).
“They should be mindful that they would face our merciless retaliatory strikes anytime and at any place and in any way”, it added.
In recent weeks, Pyongyang has been urging Seoul to accept leader Kim Jong-Un’s proposal for military talks aimed at easing cross-border tensions. Seoul has flatly rejected the offer, insisting that the North should first take a tangible step towards ending its nuclear weapons programmes. A South Korean naval vessel fired warning shots on Friday, after a patrol boat from the North and a fishing boat crossed the disputed sea border. The North’s boats swiftly retreated.
Both sides complain of frequent incursions by the other and there were minor naval clashes in 1999, 2002 and 2009.