South Korea and Japan plan to sign a military intelligence-sharing pact this week to better counter mounting threats from North Korea, South Korea's defense ministry said Monday.
The two countries signed a provisional General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) last week, less than a month after they resumed discussions on Oct. 27, South Korea's (Yonhap) News Agency reported.
"We are planning to formally sign the GSOMIA on Wednesday upon approval by President Park Geun-hye after it is passed by the Cabinet on Tuesday," a ministry official said.
South Korea's Defense Minister Han Min-koo and Japanese Ambassador to Seoul Yasumasa Nagamine are expected to sign it at the defense ministry in Seoul, he said.
"The two sides have agreed to add the word 'military' to the name of the agreement this time," another ministry official said.
The GSOMIA pact will also include a new expression of "specific secrets" to reflect Japan's 2013 specific secrets protection law, which articulates 55 items of classified information in four categories -- defense, diplomacy, anti-espionage and anti-terrorism, the official said. Any violation of the law could lead to a maximum of 10 years in prison.
In December 2014, South Korea, the US and Japan signed a preliminary deal that calls for the voluntary sharing of military secrets on North Korea's nuclear and missile programs. The deal allows Seoul and Tokyo to share such intelligence via the US after their bilateral pact fell through in 2012.
Currently, Seoul maintains pacts with 32 countries for sharing military information. It has recently asked China to start negotiations on such a pact, but China has not responded yet.
Source: QNA
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