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South Korea Fires on North Korean Warship Near Border

South and North Korean warships exchanged fire off their western coast after the North's vessel crossed a disputed sea border and ignored several warning shots, the Joint Chiefs of Staff said in Seoul.

The North Korean vessel ventured 1.3 kilometers (0.8 miles) into waters claimed by South Korea at about 10:33 a.m. local time today, triggering an exchange of fire, according to an e- mailed statement. The ship returned across the border after it was badly damaged in the exchange, Yonhap News reported, citing a government official in Seoul it didn't identify.

The clash comes just days before U.S. President Barack Obama is due to visit South Korea as part of an Asian tour. The Obama administration plans to send Stephen Bosworth, its special representative for North Korean policy, to Pyongyang in an effort to bring the communist regime back to disarmament talks, a White House official said yesterday, speaking on condition of anonymity because the decision hasn't been announced.

"North Korea often creates this kind of incident as a get- out clause" if negotiations don't go its way, said Phil Deans, a professor of international affairs at Temple University in Tokyo. "The Americans really want to engage with North Korea, resolve the nuclear issue and move on to the bigger problems they feel they have in the Middle East and Pakistan, but North Korea is very unpredictable and it's very hard to do."

News of the clash caused South Korea's Kospi Index to pare its gains. The benchmark closed up 0.4 percent at 1,582.30, having risen as much as 1.5 percent in the morning session.

No date has been given for Bosworth's trip, which comes after North Korea last week threatened to "go its own way" if the U.S. doesn't commit to direct talks. North Korea withdrew from multinational negotiations involving South Korea, Japan, China and Russia in protest against the United Nations condemnations of its April 5 firing of a long-range rocket.

North Korea said on Nov. 3 it finished reprocessing 8,000 spent fuel rods as of the end of August to extract plutonium used in nuclear weapons. The country detonated its second nuclear device in May, less than three years after its first test in 2006.

Tensions between the U.S. and North Korea cooled after an August visit to Pyongyang by former President Bill Clinton to secure the release of two detained U.S. journalists, paving the way for the direct talks announced yesterday.

Today's skirmish may be a case of North Korea seeking a scapegoat in case talks don't go its way or if Pyongyang decides to cancel the U.S. talks, Temple's Deans said.

North Korea doesn't recognize the boundary off the west coast, the scene of naval skirmishes in 1999 and 2002. The two nations remain divided after the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a cease fire, and have never signed a peace treaty.

After the South Korean ship fired warning shots, the North Korean ship opened direct fire, the Joint Chiefs statement said. The South's vessel then fired back, it said. There were no South Korean casualties and the military is on full alert for any additional provocation, the Joint Chiefs statement said.

The clash was "regrettable," Brig. Gen. Lee Ki Sik of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters in Seoul. "We strongly protest to North Korea and urge the prevention of a recurrence of such events." The South Korean vessel fired in "self- defensive," Lee said. He couldn't confirm the extent of any damage to the North Korean ship.

North Korea's military accused the South of violating its border and demanded an apology, the official Korean Central News Agency said.

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10th November 2009