The New Zealand Herald

South Korea, US scale back their military drills

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The South Korean and US militaries are scaling back their annual exercises this month due to the Covid-19 pandemic and to support diplomacy on North Korea’s nuclear programme, officials said. Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said that the allies decided to start the nine-day drillstoda­y after reviewing factors like the status of the pandemic and diplomatic efforts to achieve denucleari­sation and peace on the Korean Peninsula.

It said the drills are defensive in nature and are mostly tabletop exercises and simulation­s that won’t involve field training.

Last year, the allies cancelled their drills after some of their troops were infected with the coronaviru­s.

In recent years, the countries have also suspended or downsized many of their regular training to create more space for the now-stalled USled diplomatic drive to convince North Korea to denucleari­se in return for economic and political incentives.

US-South Korea drills have been a major source of animositie­s on the peninsula, with North Korea viewing them as invasion rehearsals and responding with its own weapons tests.

In January, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un urged the US to withdraw its hostile policy and South Korea to end drills with the US, warning the fate of their relations with North Korea depends on how they behave.

Some experts have said Kim may resume high-profile missile tests and raise tensions if he feels provoked by the upcoming drills, one of the two major military exercises between Seoul and Washington. The nuclear negotiatio­ns have been stalled for about two years since a February 2019 summit between Kim and then President Donald Trump collapsed due to wrangling over US-led sanctions on North Korea.

The Government of South Korean President Moon Jae-in, which facilitate­d the early part of the US-North Korea talks, has been calling for the diplomacy’s restart and greater inter-Korean ties.

A South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff officer said that Seoul and Washington decided to “minimise” the number of troops participat­ing in this month’s drills because of the pandemic.

The officer, who requested anonymity citing a department rule, said the allies have been staging field exercises throughout the year to maintain their readiness, rather than holding them intensivel­y in certain periods, in an apparent reference to the spring and summer drills.

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