Defense Minister Suh Wook speaks during a parliamentary session in Seoul (Yonhap)
South Korean Defense Minister Suh Wook said Tuesday North Korea's criticism of Seoul's military exercise with the United States was "regrettable."
Suh made the remark at a parliamentary hearing hours after Kim Yo-jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, threatened to scrap an inter-Korean military agreement over the combined exercise by the allies.
"I find criticism of a defensive and annual exercise regrettable," Suh said.
Asked about the possibility that North Korea would resort to military provocation, Suh said, "We're prepared against any type of contingency."
Kim accused the South of hostility for pushing ahead with springtime military exercises with the United States that kicked off on March 8 and continue through Thursday.
Suh's words echoed the defense ministry's stance expressed during a press briefing earlier in the day.
"As we've repeated, the Korea-US combined exercise is a command post exercise which has been conducted on a regular basis and is defensive in nature," ministry spokesperson Boo Seung-chan told a regular briefing.
"Our stance is that North Korea should take a flexible stance, such as responding to our dialogue offer, for the establishment of permanent and solid peace on the Korean Peninsula," he added.
Under the 2018 Comprehensive Military Agreement (CMA), the two Koreas agreed to halt all hostile acts against each other and set buffer zones along their air, land and sea borders to reduce tensions and prevent accidental clashes.
"The agreement has played a significant role in maintaining peace and stability on the peninsula, and military tensions have also been eased thanks to the agreement," Boo stressed.
The North Korean leader's sister also said the North would disband its organization handling cross-border affairs and dialogue, saying there is no reason for such an entity to exist anymore.
The statement came a day before US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin visit South Korea for "two plus two" alliance talks with their South Korean counterparts, where North Korea is expected to be a key topic. (Yonhap)