Tempo

Scrapped war drill with SoKors saves US $14M

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – When President Donald Trump announced the US would halt joint military drills with South Korea, he backed his controvers­ial move by citing the ‘‘tremendous’’ costs of such exercises.

On Monday, the Pentagon put a dollar amount – about $14 million – on the costs of Freedom Guardian, a large-scale joint drill that was to kick off in August but which was shelved after Trump met with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in a historic summit Singapore last month.

‘‘We will be stopping the war games, which will save us a tremendous amount of money, unless and until we see the future negotiatio­n is not going along like it should,’’ Trump said after meeting Kim in a bid to solve the crisis over the North’s nuclear weapons.

Trump later added on Twitter that the decision would ‘‘save a fortune.’’

The approximat­ely $14 million is not an insignific­ant sum, but represents only a tiny portion of the Pentagon’s $700 billion budget.

Pentagon spokesman Colonel Rob Manning, who disclosed the figure, did not provide a breakdown of how it was calculated.

Many of the costs associated with conducting large-scale drills are already baked into a military budget, as troops are continuall­y training regardless of whether a formal exercise is underway.

America has about 28,500 troops based in South Korea and they routinely train with their local counterpar­ts.

Freedom Guardian, which was to involve about 17,500 US troops, is usually an annual exercise that lasts two weeks. It is based on a computeriz­ed command-and-control drill that Pyongyang considers a highly provocativ­e rehearsal for invasion.

Trump faced a backlash for scrapping the drills, with critics saying he gave in too readily to Kim’s request to halt the exercises while getting little in terms of tangible commitment­s from Pyongyang in return.

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