Muscat Daily

US, South Korean defence chiefs vow more drills to counter North

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Seoul, South Korea - US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin met his counterpar­t in Seoul on Tuesday, pledging to beef up joint drills and security cooperatio­n as South Korea seeks nuclear reassuranc­es in the face of growing North Korean threats.

Seoul is eager to convince its increasing­ly nervous public of America’s so-called extended deterrence commitment­s, after a year in which North Korea declared itself an ‘irreversib­le’ nuclear power and conducted a banned weapons test almost every month.

Austin and South Korean Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup agreed to ‘expand and bolster the level and scale’ of joint military exercises, in light of ‘continued provocatio­ns’ from Pyongyang, including a recent drone incursion, they said in a statement.

Military tensions on the Korean peninsula intensifie­d sharply in 2022 as the North conducted a record-breaking number of weapons tests, including firing its most advanced interconti­nental ballistic missile.

Pyongyang sent five drones across the border on December 26, the first such incident in five years, prompting Seoul to scramble warplanes.

Austin and Lee agreed to ‘further expand and strengthen the scale and level of combined exercises and drills this year’, Lee said at a media briefing in Seoul.

This was necessary due to ‘changes in the security environmen­t, including North Korea’s recent attempts to upgrade its nuclear and missile programmes’, he said.

The two security allies will conduct a ‘tabletop exercise’ in February to improve communicat­ion on ‘ deterrence and response options’ to Pyongyang’s nuclear threats.

“We will do a number of tabletop exercises to ensure that we’re seeing things eye to eye,” Austin said at the briefing.

Any joint Us-south Korean military exercises infuriate Pyongyang, which views them as a rehearsal for an invasion and has often responded with threats and drills of its own.

Austin is visiting Seoul for the third time as defence secretary and met with both Lee and South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol.

Yoon suggested this month his country consider acquiring its own nuclear weapons - the first time in decades a sitting South Korean president has floated the idea, reflecting growing domestic concern over the reliabilit­y of US security commitment­s.

 ?? (AFP) ?? US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin shakes hands with South Korea’s Defence Minister Lee Jong-sup after a joint press conference in Seoul on Tuesday
(AFP) US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin shakes hands with South Korea’s Defence Minister Lee Jong-sup after a joint press conference in Seoul on Tuesday

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