Second Battle of Yeonpyeong

Second Battle of Yeonpyeong
Part of Korean Conflict
Date June 29, 2002
Location Northern Limit Line, Yellow Sea
Result Indecisive
Belligerents
 Democratic People's Republic of Korea  Republic of Korea
Strength
2 patrol boats 2 corvettes,
4 patrol boats
Casualties and losses
1 patrol boat severely damaged,
13 killed,
25 wounded
1 patrol boat sunk,
6 killed,
18 wounded

The Second Battle of Yeonpyeong was a confrontation at sea between North Korean and South Korean patrol boats along a disputed maritime boundary near Yeonpyeong Island in the Yellow Sea in 2002. This followed a similar confrontation in 1999. Two North Korean patrol boats crossed the contested border and engaged two South Korean patrol boats. The North Koreans withdrew before South Korean reinforcements arrived.

Contents

Background

The Northern Limit Line is considered by South Korea as the sea boundary between itself and North Korea, while North Korea disagrees and states that the boundary is farther south. North Korean fishing vessels often wander into the area and are frequently chased away by South Korean patrol vessels. Occasionally a North Korean patrol tries to enforce its southern claim by traversing the limit line. In 2002 one such incursion turned into a naval battle along the limit line.

Engagement

On June 29, 2002 a North Korean patrol boat crossed the northern limit line and was warned to turn back. Shortly afterward a second patrol craft crossed the line and it too was warned to retreat back across the line. The North Korean boats began threatening and harassing the South Korean vessels following them. After traveling three miles south past the limit line, the North Korean vessels attacked the two South Korean patrol boats that had been monitoring them. At 10:25 The vessel that had crossed the line first opened fire with its 85mm gun and scored a direct hit on the wheelhouse of one of the South Korean craft causing several casualties. The two squadrons then began a general engagement with the South Koreans using their 40 and 30 mm guns against the North Korean RPGs, 85mm, and 35mm guns. After about ten minutes two more patrol boats and two corvettes soon reinforced the South Korean vessels and severely damaged one of the North Korean craft. Now heavily outnumbered and taking casualties the North Korean vessels were forced to retreat back across the Limit Line at 10:59.[4]

Aftermath

Both the North Korean and South Korean flotillas took casualties from the action. Thirteen North Koreans were killed and twenty five wounded while four South Korean sailors died and nineteen were injured. The damaged South Korean craft later sank while under tow, while the damaged North Korean vessel was able to limp its way back to port. Both sides laid blame on each other and South Korea demanded an apology from North Korea.[5]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Ryoo, Moo Bong. (2009). "The Korean Armistice and the Islands," p. 13 (at PDF-p. 21). Strategy research project at the U.S. Army War College; retrieved 26 Nov 2010.
  2. ^ "Factbox: What is the Korean Northern Limit Line?" Reuters (UK). November 23, 2010; retrieved 26 Nov 2010.
  3. ^ Van Dyke, Jon et al. "The North/South Korea Boundary Dispute in the Yellow (West) Sea," Marine Policy 27 (2003), 143-158; note that "Inter-Korean MDL" is cited because it comes from an academic source and the writers were particular enough to include in quotes as we present it. The broader point is that the maritime demarcation line here is NOT a formal extension of the Military Demarcation Line; compare "NLL—Controversial Sea Border Between S.Korea, DPRK, " People's Daily (PRC), November 21, 2002; retrieved 22 Dec 2010
  4. ^ Ministry of National Defense, Republic of Korea (2002-07-01). "The Naval Clash on the Yellow Sea on 29 June 2002 between South and North Korea". Global Security. http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/dprk/2002/dprk-020701-1.htm. 
  5. ^ "Nakatani says Koreas situation stable after naval battle". Kyodo News International. 2002-07-02. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Nakatani+says+Koreas+situation+stable+after+naval+battle-a088685568. 

References