N. Korea slams South’s deal with ‘sworn enemy’ Japan

(FILES) This file photo taken on June 3, 2015 shows US soldiers holding the flags of South Korea (top) and the US (R) before a South Korea-US Combined Division activation ceremony at a US Army base in Uijeongbu, just north of Seoul. Donald Trump's shock comments about the possible benefits if Japan and South Korea develop atomic weapons undermine the US nuclear deterrent, with any new arsenal likely to have "dire consequences" for East Asia, defence experts say.  / AFP PHOTO / JUNG YEON-JE / TO GO WITH AFP STORY JAPAN-SKOREA-US-DIPLOMACY-NUCLEAR-DEFENCE,ANALYSIS BY URSULA HYZY
(FILES) This file photo taken on June 3, 2015 shows US soldiers holding the flags of South Korea (top) and the US (R) before a South Korea-US Combined Division activation ceremony at a US Army base in Uijeongbu, just north of Seoul.
Donald Trump’s shock comments about the possible benefits if Japan and South Korea develop atomic weapons undermine the US nuclear deterrent, with any new arsenal likely to have “dire consequences” for East Asia, defence experts say. / AFP PHOTO /

SEOUL, South Korea (AFP) — North Korea lashed out Friday at a new South Korea-Japan intelligence-sharing accord, accusing Seoul of a gross act of betrayal with the “sworn enemy” of the Korean people.

The deal to share defence intelligence — largely driven by the growing threat of the North’s nuclear and missile programmes — was reached and provisionally signed in Tokyo on Monday.

It was a controversial move in South Korea, where the legacy of Japan’s harsh 1910-45 colonial rule of the Korean peninsula is a deep well of anti-Japanese sentiment and a belief that Tokyo has never properly atoned for the abuses of that era.

Tensions between South Korea and Japan are welcomed and even encouraged by North Korea, which seizes any opportunity to drive a wedge between the two key US military allies in the region.

A spokesman for the Korea Asia-Pacific Peace Committee in Pyongyang called the intelligence agreement a “hideous act of treachery aimed to stifle fellow countrymen in the north in league with the sworn enemy of the nation”.

In a statement carried by the North’s official KCNA news, the spokesman said it was a “dangerous act” that would further raise already-elevated tensions on the Korean peninsula and open a door to Japanese “re-invasion.”

The amplified rhetoric will strike a chord in the South, where the main opposition party called Monday’s agreement “unpatriotic and humiliating”.

© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse