The Borneo Post

S. Korea, US begin joint military drills

Exercises involve 300,000 S. Korean and 17,000 US troops, strategic US naval vessels and air force assets

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Vigilance against US and South Korean enemy forces that are making frantic efforts for invasion praised. Korean Central News Agency

SEOUL: South Korea and the United States kicked off their annual, massive military exercises yesterday as North Korean leader Kim Jong- Un ordered his troops to prepare for a ‘ merciless strike’ against the enemy forces.

The drills always raise tensions on the divided Korean peninsula and this year, they come after the North’s recent ballistic missile test and the assassinat­ion by nerve agent of Kim’s half brother in Malaysia.

Participat­ion in the joint exercises — known as Key Resolve and Foal Eagle — is similar to last year, a United States Forces Korea spokesman said.

The 2016 drills involved 300,000 South Korean and around 17,000 US troops, as well as strategic US naval vessels and air force assets.

The spokesman said 3,600 US troops have been deployed for the Foal Eagle exercises, the first of the two drills that stretch over two months, but declined to provide a total figure.

South Korean Defence Minister Han Min-Koo “stressed the need to bolster the drills” in a phone call with his US counterpar­t James Mattis, who vowed “effective and overwhelmi­ng response” against any use of nuclear weapons, Seoul’s defence ministry said in a statement.

Dozens of protestors gathered outside the US embassy in Seoul on Wednesday protesting the start of the exercises, claiming they would “bring the peninsula sharply closer to the brink of a nuclear war”.

Pyongyang has long condemned the joint drills as provocativ­e rehearsals for invasion, while Seoul and Washington insist they are purely defensive in nature.

Visiting the headquarte­rs of an army unit, the North’s leader Kim praised his troops for their “vigilance against the US and South Korean enemy forces that are making frantic efforts for invasion”, the state-run Korean Central News Agency said yesterday.

Kim also ordered the troops to “set up thorough countermea­sures of a merciless strike against the enemy’s sudden air assault”, it said.

South Korea’s acting president said yesterday the country would respond with strong actions against any provocatio­ns made by the North and seek tougher UN sanctions against the isolated state.

“The government will strive to make the North realise the uselessnes­s of its nuclear weapons” through a stronger alliance with the US, including the deployment of a US missile defence system, Hwang KyoAhn said in a speech marking the anniversar­y of the country’s independen­ce movement against Japanese colonial rule.

The two allies agreed last year to install the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence ( THAAD) system to counter growing nuclear and missile threats by the North, a plan that has angered Beijing, which fears it will undermine its own ballistic capabiliti­es.

The South’s defence ministry signed a land swap deal with retail giant Lotte on Tuesday for the stationing of THAAD and said it would push for its deployment this year.

China’s foreign ministry said THAAD “jeopardise­s the strategic security interests” in the region and warned of ‘consequenc­es’ against Seoul and Washington.

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 ??  ?? South Korean policemen and soldiers stand guard at a golf course owned by Lotte, where the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system will be deployed, in Seongju, South Korea. — Reuters photo
South Korean policemen and soldiers stand guard at a golf course owned by Lotte, where the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system will be deployed, in Seongju, South Korea. — Reuters photo

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