Los Angeles Times

Trump halts drills with S. Korea

The decision to end joint military exercises unnerves U.S. allies and the Pentagon.

- By David S. Cloud david.cloud@latimes.com Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — President Trump announced a halt to joint military exercises with South Korea on Tuesday, raising alarm at the Pentagon, in Congress and among allies that the U.S. might back away from long-standing defense commitment­s in the region without concrete concession­s from long belligeren­t North Korea.

Trump unveiled the move at a news conference with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un after their summit in Singapore. He said he also wants to eventually withdraw the more than 28,000 U.S. troops permanentl­y stationed in the South as a deterrent against North Korea, which only months ago was threatenin­g Seoul and Washington with nuclear war.

Administra­tion officials said halting the joint exercises is a relatively modest concession that has great symbolic importance to Pyongyang. By helping to build trust between two longtime adversarie­s, the officials argued, the U.S. action could make it more likely that Kim will move forward on talks aimed at eliminatin­g his nuclear arsenal.

But Trump’s seemingly offhand remarks, without warning to allies South Korea and Japan, marked a potentiall­y sharp shift in U.S. defense posture in East Asia and contradict­ed decades of statements by American officials that the exercises are defensive only and critical for deterring North Korea.

Further unsettling foreign allies and even Republican­s in Congress, the president echoed North Korea’s own pejorative phrases in announcing suspension of the joint exercises with South Korea. Trump said he had agreed to stop the “war games” because they are “very provocativ­e,” terms used by North Korea in denouncing the drills, adding that it would save the United States “a tremendous amount of money.”

He said the exercises would be suspended “unless and until we see the future negotiatio­n” on eliminatin­g Pyongyang’s nuclear arsenal “is not going along like it should.”

The decision was quickly portrayed by critics as a onesided giveaway to a country that maintains one of the largest standing military forces in the world.

“These exercises for years have served as an important signal that the United States supports our allies in the region,” Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said in a statement. “It concerns me that the president is making concession­s to North Korea with nothing to show in return.”

Former Vice President Joe Biden said Trump had “reduced our leverage and signaled a weakening of our alliance in return for vague promises to begin nuclear negotiatio­ns” from an adversary that repeatedly has broken promises.

Sen. David Perdue of Georgia, a Republican member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told reporters he was “very troubled” and “surprised.”

The annual exercises, which include warplanes and naval maneuvers, have been held since at least 1976 to help the allied forces prepare for a possible North Korean attack.

In response to Republican senators’ worries, Vice President Mike Pence reassured them that smaller, routine training exercises will continue, according to Sen. Cory Gardner (RColo.).

Pentagon officials have long believed that the much larger, yearly exercises deter North Korea and improve the readiness of U.S. and South Korean troops. Former military commanders who worked in South Korea say the drills are essential in a foreign theater with an annual turnover of rank-andfile service members, their officers and the civilian analysts who support them.

This year, four separate exercises were conducted from early April to late May. One, called Foal Eagle, involved 11,500 U.S. and 290,000 South Korean troops. It was followed by Key Resolve, which used computer simulation of a possible attack by North Korea to improve headquarte­rs command and control.

Those were followed by Warrior Strike and Max Thunder, the latter an Air Force exercise that originally included sending U.S. bombers from Guam to South Korean airspace. Commanders abandoned that scenario to avoid angering Pyongyang ahead of the summit.

Suspending all such drills without parallel concession­s from Pyongyang could make reaching a larger deal on restrictin­g North Korea’s nuclear arsenal even tougher, said Michael Green, senior vice president for Asia at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

It takes away leverage from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who is expected to lead continuing talks with North Korea, Green said, and “is heartwarmi­ng for Moscow and Beijing.” Russia and China have long joined North Korea in denouncing the U.S. maneuvers in South Korea as a rehearsal for invasion.

The move could also impose a de facto timeline for making progress in the forthcomin­g nuclear talks because, with another round of military exercises scheduled for late August, Pompeo may want to see concrete actions out of Pyongyang by then, said Victor Cha, formerly a national security advisor to the George W. Bush administra­tion.

Trump’s announceme­nt apparently caught U.S. military commanders and officials in South Korea and Japan by surprise. Both countries have long-standing defense treaties with the United States.

“There is concern for both allies,” Cha said, “that Trump does not really value alliances and commitment­s. They are seeing their issues become bargaining chips” with Kim.

The U.S. military command in South Korea has “received no official updated guidance on execution or cessation on any upcoming training exercises,” said Army Col. Chad Carroll, a spokesman for the command. “We will continue with our current military posture until we receive updated guidance.”

Defense Secretary James N. Mattis, however, was “not surprised” by the decision to cancel the drills, said spokeswoma­n Dana White. “They had spoken on all of these issues well in advance.”

Green said it was “unpreceden­ted” for an American president to tell an adversary like Kim of his military plans before informing affected allies.

For Trump to show that he is “willing to cut out allies” — on the heels of his break with allies at the Group of 7 summit in Canada — “there will be ripple effects as far as Canberra [Australia] and maybe London,” Green said.

Officials in Japan especially fear that in Trump’s eagerness for a deal, he might bargain away key elements of U.S. security strategy in Northeast Asia, leaving Japan’s territory vulnerable to Kim’s short- and medium-range missiles.

South Korea has been more supportive of Trump’s outreach to Kim, and its president, Moon Jae-in, did not mention the decision to suspend military exercises in a statement praising the summit outcome.

But conservati­ve South Korean politician­s are likely to seize on the move as evidence that Trump may be willing to sacrifice longstandi­ng pillars of the U.S.South Korean alliance in his pursuit of a deal with Kim.

“The entire process can only succeed if South Korea and the U.S. stand in close coordinati­on,” said Thomas Countryman, former assistant secretary of State for nonprolife­ration. Trump’s announceme­nt “was not a positive sign but also not a fatal f law ... because it can be reversed.”

The U.S. has stationed troops in South Korea since the Korean War. Together with major U.S. air and Navy bases in Japan, the Pentagon keeps a massive military presence in Northeast Asia to support a defense treaty that requires the United States to come to South Korea’s aid if it is attacked.

 ?? Park Chul-hong Associated Press ?? A FIGHTER jet lands at an air base in Gwangju during South Korea-U.S. military exercises in May. President Trump didn’t warn South Korea or Japan that he was going to announce his decision to end the joint drills.
Park Chul-hong Associated Press A FIGHTER jet lands at an air base in Gwangju during South Korea-U.S. military exercises in May. President Trump didn’t warn South Korea or Japan that he was going to announce his decision to end the joint drills.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States