The drills known as Ulchi Freedom Shield are expected to involve thousands of military personnel, and will run for two weeks starting Monday. The US and South Korea have said they are defensive in nature and will include exercises to coordinate forces in response to an invasion from North Korea. Although official details have yet to be released, the drills are likely to involve warships, aircraft and armored vehicles.
An angry response is almost certain from North Korea, which for decades has assailed joint exercises as a prelude to invasion and nuclear war. Pyongyang has turned up the heat in its rhetoric in the past few weeks, indicating it could get back to the provocations that were largely put on hold as it battled a Covid outbreak first revealed in May, and which it said ended earlier this month.
Also Read
The US, South Korea and Japan conducted a joint missile defense exercise off Hawaii earlier this month. The public display of unity from the two US allies is an improvement from a deterioration of security ties in recent years over disputes stemming from Japan’s 1910-1945 colonial rule over the Korean Peninsula.
Yoon’s predecessor, Moon Jae-in, was wary of angering Pyongyang and making public military maneuvers that could sour ties with China or his rapprochement with North Korea.
North Korea has sought for decades to leverage the prospect of disarmament talks to scale back the US-South Korean military drills, something which former President Donald Trump agreed to during his summits with Kim Jong Un from 2018.
Kim and Trump met three times with no concrete results to roll back North Korea’s nuclear weapons arsenal, which only grew larger as the talks sputtered. Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of the leader, last month rejected a disarmament-for-aid deal offered by Yoon as “stupid” and dismissed the idea of engaging with Seoul.
The US, Japan and South Korea have all warned that North Korea is readying for its first nuclear test since 2017. Pyongyang is trying to build warheads small enough for tactical devices to hit American allies in Asia and increase the power of weapons that would be carried by intercontinental ballistic missiles to the US.
Any display of North Korea’s weapons would serve as a reminder of the security problems posed by the regime that have simmered as the attention of President Joe Biden’s administration focused on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Since most US troops are stationed in South Korea for about a year, drills are typically the only time for most of them to do real-world, widespread training with their allies. Soldiers and equipment from bases in the US and Japan at times were integrated into the operations, while a US aircraft group has sailed offshore for many incarnations.
The US still has about 28,500 troops in South Korea and military leaders on both sides have said drills are essential to prepare for any provocations by Pyongyang. North Korea positions large portions of its million-man military near the border drawn up when the cease fire took hold.
The Ulchi Freedom Shield exercise will improve South Korea’s “all-out warfare capability,” its Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement last week.