China Urges End to U.S.-South Korea Military Exercises

W460

China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi urged an end to US-South Korean military maneuvers Wednesday as well as a stop to North Korea's nuclear program to calm tensions on the peninsula.

He said Pyongyang's continuing nuclear tests were "a clear violation of U.N. resolutions," but stressed that persisting with military maneuvers around the peninsula "is not in the spirit of the resolutions either."

"Security and stability are very fragile at the moment and the danger is great of a new conflict breaking out at any time," Wang said at a joint press conference with German counterpart Sigmar Gabriel.

"We can't risk even a one percent possibility of war," he said, warning that a conflict would have "unimaginable consequences."

"Therefore, we call on all sides to be prudent and refrain from any actions or words that could lead to new provocations," he said.

Tensions have spiked in recent weeks with missile launches from the nuclear-armed North and strong rhetoric from U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.

A nuclear-powered U.S. aircraft carrier arrived in South Korea earlier this month for joint military exercises.

Pyongyang condemns the annual joint drills, which involve tens of thousands of troops, as provocative rehearsals for invasion, while Seoul and Washington insist they are purely defensive in nature.

Wang was speaking after US troops began delivering a missile defense system to a deployment site in South Korea, a move of deterrence amid fears Pyongyang may be preparing a sixth nuclear test.

Washington has repeatedly urged Beijing to use its influence to rein in its ally North Korea. At the same time, Trump has warned he is willing to ramp up U.S. military pressure.

But Beijing has long opposed such action against Pyongyang, fearing that the regime's collapse could leave the U.S. military on its doorstep, and has been calling for dialogue.

Wang himself warned in mid-April that "conflict could break out at any moment" over North Korea.

Asked if Beijing has done enough to curb its neighbor, Gabriel said that the "primary responsibility lies with North Korea."

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