Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pentagon suspends major war game with South Korea

- BY ERIC SCHMITT NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon announced Monday that it was suspending a major military exercise with South Korea that President Donald Trump had criticized as a waste of money.

The decision to cancel — at least for now — the large-scale, longplanne­d Ulchi Freedom Guardian exercise set for August had been expected after Trump’s surprise announceme­nt in Singapore that he was ending joint military exercises as an inducement for North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons program.

“Consistent with President Trump’s commitment and in concert with our Republic of Korea ally, the United States military has suspended all planning for this August’s defensive ‘war game,’” the Pentagon spokeswoma­n, Dana W. White, said in a statement released on Monday night.

“We are still coordinati­ng additional actions,” White added. “No decisions on subsequent war games have been made.”

Defense Department officials had said Friday they expected the exercise to be canceled or scaled back, and that Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and his South Korean counterpar­t, Song Young-moo, discussed canceling the exercises during a telephone call Thursday.

The possibilit­y was kicked around last week of shrinking the sprawling Ulchi Freedom Guardian down to a so-called tabletop exercise, which would be less visible but stop short of a cancellati­on. But Trump’s assertion that he was canceling “war games” made it difficult to conduct the exercise in any form without the risk that North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, would accuse the United States of failing to keep its word.

Mattis will meet at the Pentagon later this week with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the national security adviser, John R. Bolton, to discuss the issue, White said in the statement, adding that it will not affect exercises in the Pacific outside the Korean Peninsula.

Last year the Ulchi Freedom Guardian exercise ran for 11 days and involved 17,500 U.S. forces, including about 3,000 from outside the peninsula, and 50,000 South Korean troops. The exercise includes computer simulation­s carried out in a large bunker south of the capital, Seoul, intended to check the allies’ readiness to repel aggression­s by North Korea.

The announceme­nt Monday seemed to clear the way for routine training between U.S. and South Korean troops that takes place throughout the year.

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