Oman Daily Observer

Biden and S Korea’s Yoon signal expanded military drills

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SEOUL: US President Joe Biden and South Korea’s new President Yoon Suk-yeol signalled on Saturday an expanded military presence in response to the “threat” from North Korea, while also offering to help the isolated regime face a Covid-19 outbreak.

After meeting in Seoul on Biden’s first trip to Asia as president, the two leaders said in a statement that “considerin­g the evolving threat posed by” North Korea, they “agree to initiate discussion­s to expand the scope and scale of combined military exercises and training on and around the Korean peninsula”.

The possible beefing up of joint exercises comes in response to North Korea’s growing belligeran­ce, with a blitz of sanctions-busting weapons tests this year as fears grow that Kim

Jong Un will order a nuclear test while Biden is in Asia.

Biden and Yoon also extended an offer of help to Pyongyang, which has recently announced it is in the midst of a Covid-19 outbreak, a rare admission of internal troubles.

The Us-south Korea statement said the two presidents “express concern over the recent Covid-19 outbreak” and “are willing to work with the internatio­nal community to provide assistance” to North Korea to help fight the virus.

On Saturday, North Korean state media reported nearly 2.5 million people had been sick with “fever” with 66 deaths as the country “intensifie­d” its antiepidem­ic campaign.

Biden, while adding that he would not exclude a meeting with Kim if he were “sincere”, indicated the difficulty of dealing with the unpredicta­ble dictator.

“We’ve offered vaccines, not only to North Korea but to China as well and we’re prepared to do that immediatel­y,” Biden said at a press conference with Yoon. “We’ve got no response.”

For his part, Yoon stressed that the offer of Covid aid was according to “humanitari­an principles, separate from political and military issues”.

According to Yoon, he and Biden “discussed whether we’d need to come up with various types of joint drills to prepare for a nuclear attack”. Talks are also ongoing on ways to “coordinate with the US on the timely deployment of strategic assets when needed”, he said, reaffirmin­g commitment to North Korea’s “complete denucleari­sation”.

The strategic assets should include “fighter jets and missiles in a departure from the past when we only thought about the nuclear umbrella for deterrence”, he said.

Any such deployment­s, or a ramping up of Us-south Korea joint military exercises, is likely to enrage Pyongyang, which views the drills as rehearsals for war.

Biden began his day by paying respects at Seoul National Cemetery, where soldiers killed defending South Korea, including many who fought alongside US troops in the Korean War, are buried.

Biden and Yoon extended an offer of help to Pyongyang, which has recently announced it is in the midst of a Covid-19 outbreak

 ?? — AFP ?? South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and US President Joe Biden arrive for a state dinner at the National Museum of Korea in Seoul.
— AFP South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and US President Joe Biden arrive for a state dinner at the National Museum of Korea in Seoul.

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