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South Korea, US, Japan Set Up Data Sharing Channel on N Korea's Missiles

© AFP 2023 / Ed JonesA North Korean Taepodong-class missile is displayed during a military parade past Kim Il-Sung square marking the 60th anniversary of the Korean war armistice in Pyongyang on July 27, 2013
A North Korean Taepodong-class missile is displayed during a military parade past Kim Il-Sung square marking the 60th anniversary of the Korean war armistice in Pyongyang on July 27, 2013 - Sputnik International
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South Korea plans to set up a new channel for sharing information on North Korea's nuclear and ballistic missiles with the United States and Japan, local media reported Friday, citing a South Korean Defense Ministry source.

TOKYO (Sputnik) — It is expected that the channel, dubbed Link-16, will be controlled from the US military base in Osan, south of Seoul, according to the Yonhap news agency.

"Despite the U.S.-Japan linkage, information sharing will not take place without the agreement from each side and, even if it takes place, it will be confined to subjects on North Korea's nuclear weapons and missiles," a defense official was quoted as saying by the agency.

South Korean men pass by a TV news program showing images published in North Korea's Rodong Sinmun newspaper of North Korea's ballistic missile believed to have been launched from underwater and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, at Seoul Railway station in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, May 9, 2015 - Sputnik International
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According to the agency, this year the South Korean Defense Ministry will start a project to launch five spy satellites into orbit by the beginning of the 2020s. It is also planned to create a center of cyberdefense against online attacks from North Korea.

South and North Korea are still legally at war, as no peace treaty between them was signed after the Korean War of 1950-1953.

Long-standing tensions between the two Koreas flared up again in late August when cross-border artillery fire erupted along the Demilitarized Zone, prompting Pyongyang to declare what it described as a "semi-state of war." The two countries eventually defused the tensions during a series of talks.

Relations between the two countries further deteriorated when Pyongyang claimed it had carried out a hydrogen bomb test earlier this month.

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