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North Korea upgrades jamming devices: report
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Sept 6, 2011

North Korea is upgrading jamming devices to disrupt South Korean military communications, Yonhap news agency said Tuesday, citing a defence ministry report.

The communist state has some 20 types of jamming devices mostly imported from Russia and it has been developing a new device with a range of more than 100 kilometres (60 miles), the South Korean news agency said.

Yonhap cited a defence ministry report to the parliamentary defence committee. The ministry declined to comment, saying the report was confidential.

North Korea is known to have deployed jamming devices to the heavily-fortified border that are capable of disrupting Global Positioning System (GPS) signals within 50 to 100 kilometres, it said.

The North is thought to have been responsible for the intermittent failure of GPS receivers on naval and civilian craft along the west coast in August 2010.

South Korea's then-defence minister Kim Tae-Young said at the time that the devices could disrupt guided weapons and posed "a fresh security threat" to Seoul.

Seoul mobile users also complained of bad connections and the military reported GPS navigational devices malfunctioning in March, while the South and the US were staging a joint military drill criticised by the North.

The UN's International Telecommunication Union in April urged the North to stop disrupting signals in the South.

Yonhap also cited the report as saying the North could soon begin developing electromagnetic pulse (EMP) bombs that could paralyse communications via electronic signals.

"We don't have any confirmed intelligence, but given the rate of the North's development of new electronic devices and EMP development in other nations, it's possible that the North will also develop (EMP bombs)," it cited the report as saying.

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South Korea nuclear envoy to travel to US
Seoul (AFP) Sept 6, 2011 - South Korea's chief nuclear envoy will visit the United States this week, the foreign ministry said Tuesday, after North Korea's latest announcement that it was ready to resume long-stalled disarmament talks.

Wi Sung-Lac plans to meet William Burns, Deputy Secretary of State, and Stephen Bosworth, Washington's special envoy on Pyongyang, during his three-day visit beginning Wednesday, said ministry spokesman Cho Byung-Jae.

Wi is also scheduled to meet Kurt Campbell, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific affairs.

"Wi will talk with US officials on how to coordinate policy on North Korea's nuclear programme and on how to move forward with dialogue with North Korea," the spokesman said.

The North abandoned the six-party negotiations aimed at scrapping its nuclear arsenal in April 2009 and conducted its second nuclear test a month later. But diplomatic efforts to restart the dialogue have picked up this summer.

Nuclear envoys from the two Koreas held a rare meeting in Bali in July.

That was followed by a US-North Korean meeting in New York aimed at restarting the talks grouping China, Japan, the United States, the two Koreas and Russia.

The North's leader Kim Jong-Il reportedly told President Dmitry Medvedev during a visit to Russia last month that Pyongyang was ready to resume the six-party talks.

Kim also expressed readiness to impose a moratorium without preconditions on enrichment work and testing once dialogue restarted, according to the Kremlin.

But both the United States and South Korea dismissed the proposal as nothing new, with Seoul calling for action before the discussions resume.





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NUKEWARS
North Korea's Kim does not trust China: US cable
Seoul (AFP) Sept 5, 2011
North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il expressed distrust of his country's major economic prop China during a 2009 meeting with a visiting South Korean businesswoman, according to a US diplomatic cable. The cable released by anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks summarises a meeting between the US ambassador in Seoul and Hyundai Group chairwoman Hyun Jung-Eun, who had recently returned from a meeting in P ... read more


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