South Korea and US begin military exercises without field training
Despite threats from North Korea,
the armed forces of the United States and South Korea began their annual summer
exercises on Monday, South Korean broadcasters and the Yonhap news agency
reported.
South Korea's military had
announced on Sunday, however, that the nine-day commando exercise Combined
Command Post Training would be conducted on a reduced scale, without field
training.
The coronavirus pandemic and
"efforts to denuclearize the Korean Peninsula," which means the goal
of North Korea's nuclear disarmament, had played a role in the decision.
Pyongyang regularly accuses the
US of using its manoeuvres with South Korea to prepare for an attack.
Washington and Seoul deny this.
Most recently, the vice
chairperson of the central committee of North Korea's ruling Workers' Party,
Kim Yong Chol, threatened in a statement that South Korea would face a
"serious security crisis" because of its military exercises with the
US.
Earlier, North Korean strongman
Kim Jong Un's influential sister, Kim Yo Jong, threatened that North Korea
would build up its capabilities for powerful pre-emptive strikes.
According to South Korea, the
latest military exercise will focus on computer simulations. Only absolutely
necessary personnel will take part, it said.
In past years, the US and South
Korea had already reduced the manoeuvres, also for diplomatic reasons.
Negotiations on North Korea's
nuclear programme have not progressed since Kim Jong Un's failed summit with
then US president Donald Trump in Vietnam in February 2019.
The current US administration
under President Joe Biden had offered new talks without conditions, but North
Korea has rejected this option.