San Francisco Chronicle

North Korea warns of clash as military drills begin

- By Choe Sang-Hun and Austin Ramzy Choe Sang-Hun and Austin Ramzy are New York Times writers.

SEOUL — The United States and South Korea began their annual joint military exercises Monday, while North Korea warned that the drills will deepen tensions on the Korean Peninsula by “throwing fuel onto fire.”

Both the United States and South Korea insist that the drills are defensive in nature, but North Korea has long condemned the joint exercises as rehearsals for invasion. During such drills, North Korea has often escalated its warlike rhetoric and lashed out with missile and other weapons tests.

It tested a submarinel­aunched ballistic missile during the drills in August last year, following it up with a nuclear test, its fifth, the next month.

The exercises this week, known as Ulchi-Freedom Guardian, follow a North Korean threat this month to launch four ballistic missiles into waters near Guam, home to major U.S. military bases in the Western Pacific. That warning, combined with another by President Trump to bring “fire and fury” to the North unless it stood down, has escalated tensions in the region, even setting off fears of possible war.

The tensions appear to have eased somewhat since the North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un, said last week that he would “watch a little more the foolish and stupid conduct of the Yankees” before deciding whether to approve his military’s plan to fire missiles near Guam. Kim said the United States needs to “make a proper option first and show it through action” to reduce tensions.

If North Korea uses the drills this week as a reason to launch missiles around Guam or elsewhere, it could set off a new cycle of escalation.

“We have no intention of raising military tensions on the Korean Peninsula,” President Moon Jae-in of South Korea said Monday. “North Korea should not use this as a pretext for provocatio­n.”

Moon also stressed his opposition to military action against North Korea to a visiting U.S. congressio­nal delegation. “Even a very limited military option would eventually lead to an armed clash between South and North Korea,” Moon’s office quoted him as telling the delegation, led by Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass. “This would endanger the lives of many foreigners in South Korea, including American servicemen, as well as South Koreans.”

On Sunday, the North’s main state-run newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, likened the drills to an act of “throwing fuel onto fire” that would “worsen the situation.”

“No one can guarantee that this will not escalate into a real war,” it said, calling the annual drills a “rehearsal for nuclear war” and the “most naked expression of hostility” toward the North.

The war games, which last 11 days, involve 17,500 U.S. service members, including about 3,000 from outside the peninsula, and 50,000 South Korean troops. The exercises include computer simulation­s carried out in a large bunker south of Seoul intended to check the allies’ readiness to repel aggression­s by the North.

The drills this year are the second Ulchi-Freedom Guardian exercises since the United States and South Korea reportedly revised their war plans in 2015 to reflect the North’s advances in its nuclear capabiliti­es.

Adm. Harry Harris, commander of the U.S. Pacific Command, and Gen. John Hyten, chief of the U.S. Strategic Command, arrived in South Korea over the weekend to observe the exercises. Their unusual presence was meant to reaffirm the United States’ commitment to defend its ally, officials in South Korea said.

It remained unclear whether the drills would involve nuclearcap­able long-range bombers and other strategic weapons from the United States.

 ?? Jung Yeon-Je / AFP / Getty Images ?? South Koreans opposed to the joint U.S.-South Korea military exercises demonstrat­e near the U.S. Embassy in Seoul.
Jung Yeon-Je / AFP / Getty Images South Koreans opposed to the joint U.S.-South Korea military exercises demonstrat­e near the U.S. Embassy in Seoul.

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