China Daily

Seoul to send artistic delegation to Pyongyang in late March

- By PAN MENGQI panmengqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Combined forces from the Republic of Korea and the United States will launch their joint military exercises from April 1, Seoul’s Defense Ministry said on Tuesday, with speculatio­n that this year’s drills might be toned down.

The springtime exercises, code-named Key Resolve and Foal Eagle, will be carried out in a “similar scale with last year” as agreed upon by defense ministers of the two countries, according to the ministry.

Meanwhile, Yonhap news agency said the main exercise will be shortened by a month as a diplomatic thaw with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea gathers pace, quoting a ROK Defense Ministry spokesman. He also mentioned that no aircraft carrier will take part in the exercises, which Pyongyang has condemned as “provocativ­e rehearsals for an invasion”.

With talks under way to set up a ROK-DPRK summit, followed by a proposed face-toface meeting between US President Donald Trump and DPRK top leader Kim Jongun, some analysts said the drill may be more low-key than in the past.

Zhan Debin, director of Korean Peninsula research center at Shanghai University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, said the length of the exercises has been shortened as Washington and Seoul try to make concession­s to the DPRK and avoid damaging enthusiasm for discussion­s.

A similar drill was conducted for two months through March to April last year. This year’s exercises had been delayed by Seoul and Washington during the Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games in the ROK after a diplomatic thaw led the DPRK to send athletes, cheerleade­rs, artists and political delegation­s to the event in Pyeongchan­g.

According to Yonhap, Seoul informed Pyongyang of the drill schedules through the restored military hotline in the west region.

The Pentagon also said: “Our combined exercises are defense-oriented and there is no reason for North Korea to view them as a provocatio­n.”

Foal Eagle is a series of field training exercises with approximat­ely 11,500 US service personnel taking part, together with 290,000 ROK troops, while Key Resolve is a tabletop exercise using mainly computer-based simulation­s. Xinhua and Reuters contribute­d to this story.

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