South Korea Says No Official US Request for Middle East Warship Deployment

South Korea's Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back stated that his ministry has not received any official request from the United States to deploy warships to the Middle East, despite public calls from US President Donald Trump. He clarified that social media messages do not constitute an official request and stressed that any such deployment must consider national interest and require parliamentary consent. Ahn pledged to maintain firm military readiness against all possible situations arising from Middle East conflicts. The minister also noted the ongoing close coordination with the US to monitor North Korea while ensuring the safety of South Korean military units overseas.

Key Points: South Korea: No Official US Request for Middle East Warships

  • No official US request for warship deployment
  • Deployment requires parliamentary consent
  • Decision based on national interest and law
  • Military maintains readiness posture
  • Safety of overseas units a priority
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South Korea's defence chief says received no official US request on sending warships to Middle East

South Korea's defence minister says no official US request received to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz, despite Trump's public call to allies.

"The defence ministry has not received an official request. - Ahn Gyu-back"

Seoul, March 17

South Korea's defence ministry has not received any official request from the United States to deploy warships to the Middle East, Minister Ahn Gyu-back said Tuesday following US President Donald Trump's call urging allies to send vessels to protect the Strait of Hormuz.

Ahn made the remarks at a parliamentary session after Trump renewed his call Monday for South Korea, Japan, and other allies and partners to join US efforts to keep the vital shipping route open, stressing Washington has long provided security protection to those countries, Yonhap News Agency reported.

"The defence ministry has not received an official request," he told lawmakers when asked about the matter, adding he does not consider Trump's social media messages urging the deployment of warships constitute an official request.

While noting that the ministry has held various internal discussions prior to an official request, Ahn said such details are not yet at the stage where they can be disclosed.

He stressed that such a deployment "should be decided in consideration of national interest, public safety, the Constitution and law," and would be a matter that requires parliamentary consent.

The defence chief, meanwhile, pledged to maintain firm military readiness against "all possible situations" that could arise from the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.

"Going forward, our military will thoroughly maintain a firm readiness posture against all possible situations," he told lawmakers in a parliamentary defence committee meeting, taking note of what he called expanding military clashes across the Middle East.

"While securing the safety of military units dispatched overseas, the defence ministry maintains a strengthened surveillance posture against North Korea under close coordination with the United States," he added.

Last week, South Korea successfully carried out the mission "Operation Desert Shine" to bring home safely 204 nationals from Saudi Arabia with a military transport aircraft.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The minister's point about an official request vs. a social media post is crucial. Diplomacy shouldn't be conducted on Twitter. South Korea's cautious, legal approach is commendable.
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Priya S
This shows the complexity of global alliances. The US provides security but expects contributions. For India, our priority in the Middle East is energy security and protecting our workers, not getting entangled in military deployments. Wise move by Seoul.
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Aman W
Good on South Korea for standing its ground. Every country must put its citizens and constitutional processes first. The mention of "Operation Desert Shine" to bring back their nationals is the real priority—safety of people over politics.
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Michael C
While I understand the need for allies to share burdens, the US approach seems haphazard. A formal request through proper channels is basic diplomacy. South Korea's response is measured and professional.
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Kavya N
The Strait of Hormuz is critical for global oil supply. Instability there affects all oil-importing nations, including India. Hope diplomatic solutions are found soon. No one wants another war in the region. 🙏

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