South Korea ​and Japan discussed the possibility of a military-logistics ‌support agreement on Sunday, Seoul’s defense chief said, adding that Seoul remains cautious about the politically sensitive pact.

– “It requires ​the understanding and persuasion of the citizens of ​both nations, and I believe we should still ⁠proceed with caution,” Defence Minister Ahn Gyu-back told ​reporters after meeting his counterpart Shinjiro Koizumi at the ​Shangri-La Dialogue of regional defence officials in Singapore on Saturday.

– Ahn was referring to a potential acquisition and cross-servicing agreement, which would ​allow neighbouring U.S. allies Seoul and Tokyo to ​share and mutually procure military logistics such as fuel, food and ‌ammunition.

South ⁠Korea has been cautious about a deal, given persistent grievances over Japan’s 1910-1945 colonial rule and public resistance to the possibility of Japanese troops operating on ​the Korean ​Peninsula.

– Calls to ⁠Japan’s Ministry of Defense and Prime Minister’s Office seeking comment went unanswered outside business ​hours.

– Meanwhile, the Japanese defense ministry said in ​a ⁠statement that Koizumi and Ahn discussed conducting a joint humanitarian search and rescue exercise in June, for the ⁠first ​time in about nine years.

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