There's still the issue of proportional response. If indeed South Korean shells landed in North Korean waters, that was a clear act of aggression on the part of South Korea, but the North Korean response was excessive, killing two South Koreans, injuring others, and putting civilian lives in danger. I'd have thought that a more appropriate response, seeing that South Korea was merely shooting into North Korean waters (so far I am just taking your word on this midn you), would simply have been for North Korea to shoot shells into those same waters to send a warning. That way, no one would have bene hurt. Now had South Korea then begun to attack North Korean ships in North Korean waters, that would have been a different matter. But from what I can see, shelling an island is disproportionate to shelling empty water.
A: North Korea claims some shells landed in undisputed North Korea territory. Also, the tiny sliver sea on the undisputed North Korean side of the NLL is barely navigable. South Korea's four and a half hour live fire drill exercise would have shut down North Korean shipping and fishing activity. Would you voluntarily pilot a vessel a few hundred meters from exploding artillery shells?
By the way, I hope North Korea can prove those shells did land in North Korean waters. Now as for South Korea harasing North Korean shipping and economic activity, again, shelling near South Korean ships to make a few ships rock in the waves would have been a more than appropriate initial warning response. Also, seeing that they do share the same bloody language, did North Korea at least make an effort to get on the radio and inform South Korea that it had trespassed into North Korean waters? For all we know, it could easly have been an honest mistake on the South Koreans' part. Killing two marines and injuring others by shelling an island was clearly a disproprotional initial response. Certainly North Korea should have tried to communicate with the South Koreans first, then shell the water if that should fail, and then and only then shel the ships ifpush comes to shove. It seems clear to me North Korea is looking for a fight, and that's not very reassuring.
I'm not trying to paint South Korea and its allies as angels here. Not in the least. I know we can be pretty aggressive sometimes too (e.g. WMD's in Iraq). That still does not excuse North Korea from acting with the same disrespect for international laws. Two wrongs don't make a right.
IMO, South Korea should refrain from holding live fire exercises in the disputed areas.
fully agreed. I don't know what the legal standing of this is, but even if South Korea was well within its legal rights here and even if no shell entered North Korean space, it woudl seem foolhardy for the South to be practicing there giving the tensions. This just gives the impression that we have another Geore Bush at the helm there.