The Borneo Post

Mattis: US troop commitment to South Korea ‘ironclad’

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SEOUL: US Defence Secretary Jim Mattis yesterday assured South Korea of an ‘ ironclad’ commitment to its security, including keeping US troop levels unaltered, even as diplomats seek an agreement with North Korea on denucleari­sation.

Mattis, during a brief visit to Seoul, defended US President Donald Trump’s decision this month to halt ‘ war games’ with South Korea, saying it would increase the opportunit­y for diplomats to negotiate.

But Mattis added that US and South Korean forces would remain “united, vigilant and ready.”

Critics of Trump’s decision on the joint military exercises say it is a major concession to North Korea that, if prolonged during what are expected to be lengthy negotiatio­ns, risk eroding the readiness of US and South Korean forces.

North Korea has long sought a suspension of the drills.

The decision is part of efforts to defuse tensions and build trust, Mattis and his South Korean counterpar­t Song Young-moo said in a joint statement after their talks.

“The two ministers agreed to continue exploring confidence and peace-building measures as long as North Korea continues dialogue in good faith,” the statement said.

Trump has also drawn criticism from national security analysts for an agreement that emerged from his June 12 summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that had few details on how Pyongyang would surrender its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

“US commitment to the Republic of Korea remains ironclad and the US will continue to use the full range of diplomatic and military capabiliti­es to uphold this commitment,” Mattis said before meeting Song.

“And this includes maintainin­g

US commitment to the Republic of Korea remains ironclad and the US will continue to use the full range of diplomatic and military capabiliti­es to uphold this commitment.

the current US force levels on the Korean peninsula,” he said.

The US has about 28,500 troops in South Korea.

Still, Mattis has yet to explain how the US will maintain readiness of US- South Korean forces, who have long prided themselves on the ability of being able to ‘ fi ght tonight’ if needed.

Washington and Seoul have already suspended planning for the upcoming Freedom Guardian exercise, which last year involved 17,500 American troops and more than 50,000 South Korean troops.

“The recent decision to suspend the Freedom Guardian exercise creates increased opportunit­y for our diplomats to negotiate, increasing prospects for a peaceful solution on the Korean peninsula,” Mattis said, standing alongside his South Korean counterpar­t.

“At the same time, the US and ( South Korean) forces remain united, vigilant and ready to defend against any challenge.”

Mattis and Song said there had been ‘substantia­l progress’ on preparatio­ns for the transfer of wartime operationa­l control to South Korea from the US, the joint statement said, without elaboratin­g.

South Korea’s President Moon Jae-in has vowed to complete the handover during his term in office which ends in May 2022.

The defence chiefs also reaffirmed that United Nations sanctions against the North should remain in place until Pyongyang takes ‘concrete, irreversib­le’ steps toward denucleari­sation, the joint statement said.

North Korean state media has said Trump had agreed during his summit with Kim to lift sanctions against the North in addition to providing security guarantees, under the principle of ‘step- bystep and simultaneo­us action’. — Reuters

Jim Mattis, US Defence Secretary

 ??  ?? Mattis (left) shakes hands with Song during a joint press conference before their meeting in Seoul. — AFP photo
Mattis (left) shakes hands with Song during a joint press conference before their meeting in Seoul. — AFP photo

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