Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. carrier visits S. Korea after drills

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BUSAN, South Korea — U.S. naval commanders on Saturday reiterated Washington’s “ironclad” commitment to defend South Korea against North Korean threats as an American nuclear-powered aircraft carrier visited a South Korean port after joint naval drills.

Rear Adm. Brad Cooper, commander of Naval Forces Korea, said aboard the USS Ronald Reagan that the drills enhanced the allies’ ability to coordinate operations.

The five-day drills that ended Friday involved fighter jets, helicopter­s and 40 naval ships and submarines from the two countries training for potential North Korean aggression. In an apparent show of force against North Korea, the United States also sent several of its advanced warplanes, including four F-22 and F-35 fighter jets and two B-1B long-range bombers, for an air show and exhibition in Seoul that began Tuesday.

The drills came ahead of President Donald Trump’s first official visit to Asia next month.

The allies regularly conduct joint military exercises that Pyongyang condemns as invasion rehearsals. North Korea’s official Rodong Sinmun newspaper said Saturday that the latest naval drills have resulted in a “touch-andgo situation” for the Korean Peninsula and accused the allies of “getting frantic with the move to start a nuclear war.”

The United States has been sending its strategic assets to the region more frequently for patrols or drills as North Korea increases its efforts to expand its nuclear weapons program.

In recent months, North Korea has tested developmen­tal interconti­nental ballistic missiles that could potentiall­y reach the U.S. mainland and conducted its most powerful nuclear test to date. It also flew two powerful new midrange missiles over Japan between threats to fire the same weapons toward Guam, a U.S. Pacific territory and military hub.

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