The United States said Friday it had approved more than USD 600
million in sales of air defense missiles to South Korea and Japan as tensions
return with North Korea. It had approved 94 SM-2 missiles
used by ships against air threats, along with 12 guidance
systems for a total cost of $313.9 million. It separately
gave the green light to sell 160 anti-air AMRAAM missiles and related guidance equipment to Japan
for $317 million. It came in the wake of talks with the
United States and South Korea stalling in February, and raised alarms in both
countries, which have been seeking to entice the North into abandoning its
nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs. The sales "will support the foreign policy and national security
objectives of the United States" by assisting key allies and "will
not alter the basic military balance in the region," a State Department
statement said. The tests come amid a standstill in negotiations between North
Korea and the United States, where President Donald Trump had boasted of ending
Pyongyang's missile tests. A second summit between Trump and North Korean
leader Kim Jong Un ended in deadlock in February, with the US side refusing
demands to ease sanctions until Pyongyang takes major steps to end its nuclear
program.
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