Kim warns troops to prepare for 'sacred war' during US-South Korea exercises
August 18, 2012 -- Updated 2018 GMT (0418 HKT)

South Korean police in gas masks take part in a drill Saturday in Seoul as part of joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises.
Kim's comments came 
during a visit on Mu Island with troops who participated in the 2010 
shelling of South Korea's Yeonpyeong Island, an attack that North Korea 
at the time said South Korea provoked by holding war games off their 
shared coast.
"He ordered the service 
persons of the detachment to be vigilant against every move of the enemy
 and not to miss their gold chance to deal at once deadly counter blows 
at the enemy, if even a single shell is dropped on the waters or in the 
area where the sovereignty of (North Korea) is exercised," the state-run
 KCNA news agency reported.
The warning followed an 
announcement by the United States and South Korea that their joint 
"Ulchi Freedom Guardian" training exercises would begin Monday and 
conclude by August 31.
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North Korea was informed of the dates of the exercises by the U.N. armistice commission.
The Neutral Nations 
Supervisory Commission, which was established by the Korean Armistice 
Agreement that brought about an end to the Korean War, will supervise 
the exercise, South Korea and the United States military said in a joint
 statement. The commission includes representatives from Switzerland, 
China and other nations selected by the United Nations.
Washington and Pyongyang 
have no diplomatic relations. North and South Korea have no formal ties 
and remain technically in a state of war since a 1953 truce that ended 
the Korean War.
During the visit with troops, Kim observed Yeonpyeong Island "clearly visible from the post," KCNA reported.
The Yeonpyeong attack in
 November 2010 was the first direct artillery assault on South Korea by 
North Korea since 1953, when an armistice ending the fighting.
Two civilians and two 
South Korean marines died in the attack, which South Korea's government 
at the time called a "definite military provocation" by North Korea.
The sparsely populated 
Yeonpyeong is located just south of the Northern Limit Line, the line 
drawn in 1953 by the United Nations at the end of the Korean War. The 
United Nations drew the line three nautical miles from the North Korean 
coast and put five islands close to the coast under South Korean 
control.
That was supposed to be a
 temporary arrangement. But in the absence of a full peace agreement, 
the Northern Limit Line remains in place.
North Korea has been virtually isolated from the world by international sanctions over its development of a nuclear program.
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