Arab Times

US, S.Korea postpone drills

Bid to bolster N.Korea peace effort

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BANGKOK, Nov 17, (RTRS): The United States and South Korea said on Sunday they will postpone upcoming military drills in an effort to bolster a stalled peace push with North Korea, even as Washington denied the move amounted to another concession to Pyongyang.

The drills, known as the Combined Flying Training Event, would have simulated air combat scenarios and involved an undisclose­d number of warplanes from both the United States and South Korea.

In deference to Pyongyang, the exercises had already been reduced in scale and scope from previous years, but North Korea still objected to them regardless.

US Defense Secretary Mark Esper said the US and South Korean militaries would remain at a high state of readiness despite the move, and denied that the decision to postpone the drills was a concession to North Korea.

“I don’t see this as a concession. I see this as a good faith effort ... to enable peace,” Esper told reporters, as he announced the decision alongside South Korean counterpar­t Jeong Kyeong-doo in Bangkok, where Asian defense chiefs are gathered for talks.

“I think creating some more space for our diplomats to strike an agreement on the denucleari­zation of the peninsula is very important.”

The drills were meant to begin in the coming days.

Earlier this month, a senior North Korean diplomat blamed the US joint aerial drill for “throwing cold water” over talks with Washington. Pyongyang regularly opposes such US-South Korean joint military exercises, viewing them as a rehearsal for invasion.

Johnson

Nuclear

Still, it was unclear whether the decision by Washington and Seoul would kickstart talks with Pyongyang aimed at getting the reclusive state to give up its nuclear weapons program.

Esper said he hoped North Korea would respond to the gesture.

“We encourage the DPRK to demonstrat­e the same goodwill as it considers decisions on conducting training, exercises and testing,” he said, using the acronym for the North’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.

“We also urge the DPRK to return to the negotiatin­g table without preconditi­on or hesitation.”

As talks stall, North Korea has tested the limits of engagement with a string of missile launches, and experts warn that the lack of a concrete arms control agreement has allowed the country to continue producing nuclear weapons.

The missile tests have practical value for the North Korean military’s efforts to modernize its arsenal. But they also underscore Pyongyang’s increasing­ly belligeren­t position in the face of what it sees as an inflexible

Italy battered by rain:

Several Italian cities were on high alert on Sunday after heavy rain overnight, including Venice where residents and tourists were braced for another exceptiona­l high tide.

The city, which suffered its worst flooding in 50 years on Tuesday, will face a high tide at around 160 cm (5.25 feet) at 1200 GMT, the city’s centre for forecastin­g tides said.

Merkel

and hostile United States.

North Korea said on Sunday it had tried to interpret the US adjustment­s to joint drills positively, but the recent UN resolution on human rights showed Washington had no sincerity in upcoming talks.

Pyongyang described the UN criticism of its human rights record as a product of US “hostile policy” aimed at toppling its regime, and called the resolution a US “political provocatio­n.

“Even if dialogue open, nuclear issues will never be discussed, before the issue of withdrawin­g US hostile policy was put on the agenda to improve relations with us,” the North’s foreign ministry said in a statement carried by the official KCNA news agency.

Ensure

At the start of a three-way meeting with Esper and South Korea’s Jeong in Bangkok, Japanese Defence Minister Taro Kono cautioned against optimism and called for the three nations to ensure military readiness.

“No one could be optimistic about North Korea,” Kono said. “North Korea has repeatedly launched more than 20 missiles this year, including new types of ballistic missiles, as well as a submarine-launched ballistic missile.”

Back at home, Trump has been accused by critics in Congress of being too willing to grant concession­s to Pyongyang, without getting enough in return. Trump says he has secured a halt in North Korea’s interconti­nental ballistic missile and nuclear tests, significan­tly lowering fears of war.

In June, Trump became the first sitting US president to set foot in North Korea, meeting its leader, Kim Jong Un, in the Demilitari­zed Zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas.

He became the first sitting US president to meet a North Korea leader in 2017, when he announced plans to halt what he called at the time “very provocativ­e” and expensive regular military exercises with South Korea.

The US military later clarified that this only applied to “major” drills on the peninsula and the United States and South Korea kept carrying out other types of training.

The Combined Flying Training Event was not seen as a major drill by Seoul and Washington.

The exercises had already been scaled back from 2017, when it was called Vigilant Ace. Vigilant Ace had more than 230 aircraft, including six F-22 Raptor stealth fighters, and around 12,000 US service members.

Asked when the United States and South Korea would hold the postponed drills, South Korea’s Jeong declined to offer any sense of timing, saying only that it would be decided through “close coordinati­on” with Washington.

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