Arab Times

US says ready to defend S. Korea

‘Full range capabiliti­es’

-

SEOUL, Nov 14, (RTRS): A top US military officer reaffirmed on Thursday that the United States is ready to use the “full range” of its capabiliti­es to defend South Korea from any attack, a joint statement after a meeting with officials in Seoul said.

Senior US defence officials are gathering in Seoul for annual meetings as the two countries face intensifyi­ng threats from North Korea to stop joint military drills and for the United States to change its approach in denucleari­sation talks.

The United States is also seeking a greater financial contributi­on from South Korea for hosting American troops, while urging Seoul to revoke its decision to scrap an intelligen­ce-sharing pact with Japan known as GSOMIA, which Washington fears would undermine trilateral cooperatio­n.

General Mark Milley, the US Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, met his South Korean counterpar­t General Park Han-ki for the annual Military Committee Meeting (MCM) on Thursday.

Both sides discussed ways to maintain solid defence posture and a planned transfer of wartime operationa­l control to South Korea, the joint statement said, even as they have scaled back joint exercises to expedite negotiatio­ns with North Korea.

Milley reiterated the “continued commitment to providing extended deterrence”, the statement said.

“He affirmed that the United States remains prepared to respond to any attack on the Korean Peninsula, using the full range of US military capabiliti­es.”

US Defence Secretary Mark Esper visits Seoul later on Thursday, ahead of a meeting with South Korean Defence Minister Jeong Kyeong-doo for the annual Security Consultati­ve Meeting (SCM) on Friday.

Changes

Esper said on Wednesday he was open to changes in US military activity in South Korea if it helped diplomats trying to jump-start stalled talks with North Korea.

Pyongyang has derided the US-South Korea exercises as hostile, even in the current reduced form. On Wednesday, it threatened to retaliate if the allies go ahead with scheduled drills in a rare statement from the State Affairs Commission, a top governing body chaired by leader Kim Jong Un.

Cheong Seong-chang, a senior fellow at South Korea’s Sejong Institute think-tank, said the North’s statement appeared to be aimed at justifying future North Korean military actions.

Milley has hinted at raising the troop cost sharing and Japan issues, though the joint statement did not address them directly.

“Chairman Milley is expected to focus on South Korea increasing its contributi­on for defence costs and extending GSOMIA,” a South Korean military source said.

US President Donald Trump’s insistence Seoul take on a greater share of the cost of 28,500-strong American military presence as deterrence against North Korea has rattled South Korea. It could also set a precedent for upcoming US negotiatio­ns on defence cost-sharing with other allies.

A South Korean lawmaker said last week that US officials demanded up to $5 billion a year, more than five times what Seoul agreed to pay this year under a one-year deal.

Washington has also been pressing Seoul to reconsider its decision to scrap the GSOMIA intelligen­ce-sharing pact with Japan. The pact, which South Korea decided not to renew, expires on Nov 23.

Esper said on Wednesday that GSOMIA “must be maintained” for cooperatio­n between the United States, South Korea and Japan against any “North Korean bad behaviour”, adding the dispute was only benefiting North Korea and China.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait