Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. cancels massive military exercises in apparent concession to North Korea

- By David S. Cloud

Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is permanentl­y canceling the large-scale military exercises in South Korea usually held in the spring, U.S. officials said Friday, handing Pyongyang a longsought concession only days after a summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un broke up without a deal.

The timing of the decision raised questions about whether Mr. Trump was giving away a major piece of leverage over North Korea, which has long denounced the exercises as provocativ­e, and failing to get anything in return.

“Why negotiate with the United States when it makes concession­s for free?” Abraham Denmark, a former top Pentagon official during the Obama administra­tion, wrote in a tweet. He said the decision to halt the maneuvers would have “major implicatio­ns for readiness” of U.S. and South Korean forces.

Thousands of U.S. and South Korean troops had conducted the exercises, known as Key Resolve and Foal Eagle — annually for more than a decade. But last year, Mr. Trump suspended several annual Korea exercises, citing the cost and the need to ease

tensions with North Korea.

The spring maneuvers will be replaced by smallersca­le drills that don’t call for major field maneuvers but still ensure that U.S. and South Korean forces can repel a North Korean invasion, said the officials, who did not want speak on the record ahead of the formal announceme­nt, expected Saturday.

Mr. Trump has repeatedly complained about the largescale exercises, saying they’re too costly and that the U.S. bears too much of the financial burden. But defenders say the training is relatively cheap, noting estimates that a separate Korea exercise staged by the Pentagon cost only $14 million a year.

The president hinted at the decision to cancel them Thursday at a news conference in Hanoi.

“Those exercises are very expensive,” Mr. Trump said. “And I was telling the generals, I said: Look, you know, exercising is fun and it’s nice and they play the war games. And I’m not saying it’s not necessary, because, at some levels, it is, but at other levels, it’s not. But it’s a very, very expensive thing. And, you know, we do have to think about that, too.”

U.S. officials are expected to inform South Korea of the decision shortly, the officials said.

In the past, the U.S. conducted several major field exercises with South Korea each year, one in late summer or fall and one in the spring, as well as several other training events that using computer simulation­s and tabletop war games.

Pentagon officials and U.S. commanders in South Korea, where the U.S. keeps 28,500 troops, have been discussing changes to the exercises since they were suspended last year, officials said. It was initially expected that the cancellati­on announceme­nt could be part of a summit agreement between Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim.

Plans to announce the cancellati­on proceeded, despite the lack of a summit deal.

Pentagon officials long have believed that maneuvers involving troops, warplanes, tanks and mock amphibious invasions help deter North Korean aggression and are essential to maintainin­g readiness, because of high annual turnover of U.S. troops in South Korea.

But last month the U.S. commander in Korea, Army Gen. Robert Abrams, played down the decision to halt the joint exercises, saying troops from both countries remained prepared to defend South Korea “without sacrificin­g warfightin­g readiness to unacceptab­le levels.”

Mr. Trump cut short the summit Thursday with no agreement on rolling back North Korea’s nuclear program, a setback to his highprofil­e diplomatic outreach to the reclusive nation.

Mr. Kim had sought the lifting of most economic sanctions in return for a promise to dismantle at least part of his Yongbyon nuclear facility, an offer the administra­tion deemed inadequate, a senior State Department official said.

The decision to proceed with the cancellati­on after the failed summit “looks bad, but I suspect it was agreed separately and people did not consider how it would look if Hanoi failed,” said Melissa Hanham, a nuclear weapons expert and North Korea specialist at One Earth Future, an antiprolif­eration organizati­on based in Colorado.

Gen. Abrams alluded to the plans to cancel the spring drills last month, telling lawmakers that a “new construct” for training worked out with South Korean commanders had been “forwarded up to the Department of Defense and received full support.”

North Korea had made little change to its threatenin­g military posture since Mr. Trump and Mr. Kim first met last June in Singapore, he noted.

Although its equipment is increasing­ly outdated, Pyongyang’s maintains one of the largest convention­al militaries in the world, along with a stockpile of nuclear weapons.

“These capabiliti­es continue to hold the United States, the Republic of Korea and our regional allies at risk. As such I believe it is necessary to maintain a postured and ready force to deter any possible aggressive actions,” Gen. Abrams said.

Other annual U.S.-South Korea exercises are not directly affected by the decision to cancel the large-scale spring drills but are also likely to be scaled back or canceled, the officials said.

Last year, four separate exercises were conducted from early April to late May, including Foal Eagle, which involved 11,500 U.S. and 290,000 South Korean troops. It was followed by Key Resolve, which used a computer simulation of a possible attack by North Korea to improve headquarte­rs command and control.

 ?? Manan Vatsyayana/Pool Photo via AP ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrives Friday for a welcoming ceremony at the Presidenti­al Palace in Hanoi, where he was to meet with Vietnamese leaders.
Manan Vatsyayana/Pool Photo via AP North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrives Friday for a welcoming ceremony at the Presidenti­al Palace in Hanoi, where he was to meet with Vietnamese leaders.

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