S. Korea’s Navy Holds Regular Multinational Mine Warfare Drills

General

South Korea’s Navy said Thursday it has kicked off a multinational naval mine warfare exercise in waters south of the Korean Peninsula on Thursday in an effort to enhance combined operational capabilities.

The annual exercise is set to run through next Friday in waters southeast of the southern island of Geoje, 330 km southeast of Seoul, involving five members of the US-led UN Command (UNC), according to the military branch, South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency reported.

The Navy said the exercise is designed to help members of the UNC, which enforces the 1953 armistice that effectively ended the Korean War, to familiarize themselves with the warfare environment of the Korean Peninsula.

For the drills, the Navy deployed eight vessels, including the ROKS Nampo minelayer, while the US Navy sent the USS Pioneer mine countermeasures ship and two other vessels, Yonhap explained.

Belgium, Canada, New Zealand and the Philippines sent bomb disposal teams and personnel operating unmanned underwater vehicles.

Participants plan to engage in a series of drills on laying, detecting and removing mines, according to the Korean Navy.

Prior to the exercise, the US Naval Forces Korea hosted a three-day mine warfare forum in the southeastern port city of Busan on Monday, attended by officials from 19 countries, to discuss counter-mine operations using maritime combat systems.

Source: Qatar News Agency