South Korea Holds Military Drills
Despite protests from North Korea, South Korea is holding a very large military exercise:
South Korea has launched its biggest-ever anti-submarine exercises, the military says, despite warnings of retaliation from the North.
Some 4,500 personnel are taking part in five days of drills in the Yellow Sea, near the disputed maritime border.
The South is making a show of strength amid continuing anger over the sinking of one of its warships in March.
Seoul says a northern torpedo sank the Cheonan, but Pyongyang denies the claim and says the drills are a provocation.
Forty-six South Korean sailors were killed when the Cheonan went down in the Yellow Sea on 26 March.
The latest drills, which follow a joint US-South Korean military exercise, will involve 29 ships and 50 planes.
Although the Ministry of Defence says the ships will stay clear of the disputed west coast sea boundary, marines stationed on islands close to the border will conduct live-fire exercises.
Military officials said the exercises were "defensive" in nature.
"The focus of the exercises is to strengthen our response to the enemy's asymmetric provocations and also our joint operations capabilities," an official at the Joint Chiefs of Staff told Yonhap news agency.
"We will not tolerate any kind of provocations by the enemy, and the drills will allow us to be fully prepared for combat."
In North Korea's official media, a statement attributed to military leaders called the exercises a "direct military invasion aimed at infringing upon the DPRK's [North Korea's] right to self-defence".
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