S.Korea talks tough after N.Korea shelling attack

INCHEON, South Korea,  (Reuters) – South Korea warned  North Korea of “enormous retaliation” if it took more  aggressive steps after Pyongyang fired scores of artillery  shells at a South Korean island in one of the heaviest attacks  on its neighbor since the Korean War ended in 1953.

The South fired back after Tuesday’s attack and sent  fighter jets to the area, near a disputed maritime border on  the west of the divided Korean peninsula and the scene of  deadly clashes between the two rivals in the past.

South Korea was conducting military drills in the area at  the time but said it had not been firing at the North, which  recently revealed a major new aspect to its nuclear program.

Pyongyang said Seoul started the fight, which killed two  South Korean soldiers and wounded 17 others and three civilians  while sending tremors through world markets already unsettled  by Ireland’s debt woes and a shift to less risky assets.

Calling the incident “an invasion of South Korean  territory,” South Korean President Lee Myung-bak warned that  future provocations could be met with a strong response,  although there was no indication of immediate retaliation.

“I think enormous retaliation is going to be necessary to  make North Korea incapable of provoking us again,” Lee said in  a visit to military headquarters in Seoul. In another gesture,  he met with security officials in a bunker at the presidential  complex.

The United States, which has 28,000 troops in South Korea,  condemned the attack, but said it was too soon to discuss how  the U.S. military might seek to deter the impoverished,  reclusive communist state from another strike and stressed that  it was looking for a measured response.

The U.S. and South Korean defense chiefs agreed to  coordinate any response to the shelling, the Pentagon said.U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, a former South Korean  foreign minister, also condemned the attack but urged restraint  and dialogue between the two sides. China, North Korea’s main ally, was careful to avoid taking  sides, calling on both Koreas to “do more to contribute to  peace.”

Analysts said they saw little chance of the United States  rushing to resume so-called six-party talks on North Korea’s  nuclear programs.
The incident followed revelations over the weekend that  Pyongyang is fast developing another source of material to make  atomic bombs, and analysts said the North may again be pursuing  a strategy of calculated provocations to wrest diplomatic and  economic concessions from the international community.

It also follows moves by leader Kim Jong-il to make his  untested youngest son his heir apparent, leading some analysts  to suggest the shelling may partly have been aimed at  burnishing the ruling family’s image with the military.

The South Korean military estimated some 100 shells landed  on and near Yeonpyeong island, which lies off the west coast of  the peninsula. It returned fire with 80 of its own shells.

Photographs from the island, 120 km (75 miles) west of  Seoul, showed smoke rising from buildings.
“Houses and mountains are on fire and people are  evacuating. You can’t see very well because of plumes of  smoke,” a witness on the island told YTN Television.
Experts say North Korea’s Kim has for decades played a  carefully calibrated game of provocation to squeeze concessions  from the international community and impress his own military.  The risk is that the leadership transition has upset this  balance and that events spin out of control.    South Korea’s Lee said attacking civilians was unforgivable  and further aggression would be severely punished.

“Our military should show this through action rather than  an administrative response,” said Lee, who was due to discuss  the incident with U.S. President Barack Obama by telephone.

But Lee made no suggestion the South would retaliate  further, suggesting Seoul was taking a measured response.
North Korea, for its part, kept up the bellicose rhetoric,  warning in a military communique of “merciless counter-actions”  if South Korean forces violate any of its territory.

UNRESOLVED WAR
The North has a huge array of artillery pointed at Seoul  that could decimate an urban area home to around 25 million  people and cause major damage to its trillion-dollar economy.The two Koreas are still technically at war — the Korean  War ended only with a truce — and tension rose sharply early  this year after Seoul accused the North of torpedoing one of  its navy vessels, killing 46 sailors.

North Korea, which has often decried joint U.S.-South  Korean military exercises, blamed its wealthy neighbor.
“Despite our repeated warnings, South Korea fired dozens of  shells from 1 p.m. … and we’ve taken strong military action  immediately,” its KCNA news agency said in a brief statement.