Defense minister makes pitch for South Korea's bid to secure Canada's submarine project

Home > National > Defense

print dictionary print

Defense minister makes pitch for South Korea's bid to secure Canada's submarine project

South Korean Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back and his Canadian counterpart, David McGuinty, shake hands during their meeting in Ottawa on Feb. 25. [MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE]

South Korean Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back and his Canadian counterpart, David McGuinty, shake hands during their meeting in Ottawa on Feb. 25. [MINISTRY OF NATIONAL DEFENSE]

 
Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back has made an emphatic pitch for South Korea's bid to win Canada's high-profile submarine procurement project during talks with his Canadian counterpart in Ottawa, saying the Asian country's participation in it would serve as a "turning point" for bilateral defense cooperation.
 
Ahn and Canadian Defense Minister David McGuinty met on Wednesday, hours before the "two plus two" meeting of the two countries' defense and foreign ministers amid Seoul's stepped-up push to secure the Canadian Patrol Submarine Project, estimated at 60 trillion won ($41 billion).
 

Related Article

 
"Minister Ahn emphasized that the Republic of Korea's participation in the next-generation submarine project, which Canada has been pushing for, will go beyond just a simple arms export to serve as a turning point that will substantially develop bilateral defense and arms industry cooperation," the Defense Ministry said in a release.
 
"He also underscored that South Korea can be the best choice for Canada, which is seeking a mid- and long-term partnership as mentioned in its Defense Industrial Strategy," it added.
 
Canada has been pushing for the project to procure up to 12 submarines for patrol missions. A South Korean consortium of Hanwha Ocean and HD Hyundai Heavy Industries and Germany's ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems is in the high-stakes competition.
 
During the talks, McGuinty expressed his expectations that the two countries' cooperation will deepen in areas, including space and maritime security, according to the ministry.
 
Ahn asked for Canada's support in Seoul's policy for peace on the Korean Peninsula and North Korea's denuclearization, stressing Pyongyang's advancing nuclear and missile capabilities were becoming a "grave threat" to the international community.
 
The meeting comes ahead of the "two plus two" talks between their foreign and defense ministers, which will be followed by a joint military and defense intelligence-sharing pact and a press conference.

Yonhap
Log in to Twitter or Facebook account to connect
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
help-image Social comment?
s
lock icon

To write comments, please log in to one of the accounts.

Standards Board Policy (0/250자)