Houston Chronicle

War games signal end to thaw with North Korea

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The Pentagon has no plans to suspend additional joint military exercises on the Korean Peninsula in another indication that the diplomatic thaw between Washington and Pyongyang may be in trouble.

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon has no plans to suspend additional joint military exercises on the Korean Peninsula, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Tuesday, in another indication that the diplomatic thaw between Washington and Pyongyang may be in trouble.

“We took the step to suspend several of the largest exercises as a good-faith measure coming out of the Singapore summit,” Mattis told reporters at the Pentagon, referring to President Donald Trump’s decision to shelve largescale drills with South Korea after meeting with Kim Jong Un, the North Korean leader, in June.

“We have no plans at this time to suspend any more exercises,” Mattis said.

He added that “there are ongoing exercises all the time on the peninsula” but that “North Korea could not in any way misinterpr­et those as somehow breaking faith with the negotiatio­n.”

“So the exercises continue,” Mattis said.

Trump’s decision in June to suspend the huge annual military exercises that had long been planned with South Korea took even senior U.S. military officials by surprise.

The defense secretary’s comments, at a rare news conference at the Pentagon, add to rising tensions between the United States and North Korea that escalated over the weekend.

State media in North Korea criticized the United States for what it called “extremely provocativ­e and dangerous military moves” in Pacific waters. Late last week, Trump announced that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo would cancel his most recent plan to travel to Pyongyang.

It was unclear whether Mattis’ comments reflect a concerted shift in the Trump administra­tion’s effort to rein in North Korea’s nuclear ambitions.

Trump’s policy toward Pyongyang has swung back and forth over the past year, from a namecallin­g Twitter spat with Kim to an unpreceden­ted rapprochem­ent at the face-to-face meeting in Singapore.

More recently, however, the Trump administra­tion is increasing­ly expressing frustratio­n over the slow pace of diplomatic negotiatio­ns and fears that North Korea is not making substantiv­e moves toward dismantlin­g and ending its nuclear weapons program — as Washington said was promised during the meeting in Singapore.

In announcing the cancellati­on of the military exercises back in June, Trump called them “provocativ­e” and costly. Mattis said Tuesday that the cancellati­on was done as a “good-faith effort” to help the diplomatic negotiatio­ns.

He declined to comment on whether restarting large-scale military exercises could be viewed as provocativ­e.

“I don’t have a crystal ball,” he said. “Even answering a question in that manner could influence the diplomatic effort.”

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