S. Korea to share intel with Japan via U.S. trilateral deal
  • 5 years ago
국방부 "GSOMIA 종료 후 TISA로 한미일 정보공유 강화해나갈 것"

Now that GSOMIA is scrapped, South Korea plans to utilize the Seoul-Washington-Tokyo Trilateral Information Sharing Arrangement, or TISA, to effectively counter North Korea threats that still exist.
Our Oh Jung-hee now takes a deeper look at what the arrangement is.
The South Korean military says... even without a bilateral pact, classified information can still be shared between Seoul and Tokyo through Washington.
On Friday, Seoul's defense ministry told reporters... that it will continue and strengthen the sharing of military information between the three through TISA, or the Trilateral Information Sharing Arrangement.
TISA was signed back in 2014 a year after the North carried out its third nuclear test.
The three countries felt the need to exchange intelligence... in light of the North's growing nuclear and missile threats.
TISA enables Seoul and Tokyo to share information with each other via the U.S.
South Korea and Japan send the U.S. information, which the U.S. then evaluates and sends to the other side.
The information can take oral, visual, or written form.
Concerns are that it could take longer for South Korea and Japan to exchange intel and it could reduce the quality of the information compared to GSOMIA.
But the level of information shared through TISA differs case by case it could be level two or three, but sometimes level one.
And Seoul says... the three countries will be working to share worthwhile information upon sufficient consideration.
"GSOMIA will remain in effect for 90 more days. Until November 22nd, South Korea's military says it will be sharing information directly with Japan as necessary. Oh Jung-hee, Arirang News."
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