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South Korea asks US to delay joint military drills until after the Winter Olympics

SEOUL — South Korea is considering delaying its next round of joint military exercises with the United States until after the Winter Olympic Games to avoid provoking North Korea, the presidential office in Seoul said Wednesday.

Delaying the huge exercises would be a considerable olive branch to Pyongyang and underscores Seoul’s concern that North Korea might try to interfere with the Winter Games, which are due to be held just 50 miles south of the border between the two Koreas starting Feb. 9.

The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, has raised concerns about the safety of American athletes at the Games, although the White House later said that they would attend.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in said he had asked the U.S. military to postpone joint military exercises until after the Olympics, and the American command in Seoul said it was considering the request.

“It is possible for South Korea and the U.S. to review the possibility of postponing the drill,” Moon told NBC News in an interview Tuesday, adding that this was dependent on North Korea not conducting any more missile or nuclear tests.

“I have made such suggestion to the U.S., and the U.S is currently reviewing. It all this depends on how North Korea behaves,” Moon said.

An official at the president’s official residence, Blue House, clarified these remarks Wednesday, saying that the allies would only delay the exercises for the duration of the Games. The Paralympics finish March 18.

[From Beaver Creek, U.S. ski team has unclear outlook on PyeongChang Olympics]

Each spring, the U.S. and South Korean militaries conduct huge field and computer-based exercises to train for a conflict with North Korea or the collapse of the regime there.

The dates for next year’s exercises have not yet been announced, but the Key Resolve computer-simulated command post exercise was held from March 8 to 23 this year, while the eight-week-long Foal Eagle field training exercises began on March 1 and continued through the end of April.

About 17,000 American and more than 300,000 South Korean troops participated in the exercises, which included drills to to pre-emptively “detect, defend, disrupt and destroy” North Korean nuclear and missile facilities. 

The two militaries have this month been doing winter training exercises at Pyeongchang, the site of the Winter Olympics, including ski combat training in temperatures that have plumbed depths of minus 4 degrees.

“Both the U.S. Marines and the [South Korean] marines have covered over-the-snow ability,” U.S. Marine Corps Captain Thomas Rigby told reporters in Pyeongchang this week. “We’ve covered reconnaissance skills as well as critical combat skills in a cold-weather mountainous environment.” 

The winter training exercises finish Friday.

The proposal to delay the spring training exercises “is limited to holding the Olympic Games peacefully,” the unnamed official told local reporters.

“Because the Olympics is an international event and the North Korean nuclear issue is creating a global crisis, it is only natural that we make efforts to find a solution [to the North Korean nuclear issue] through the Olympic Games if we must,” the official said, according to the Yonhap News Agency.

[Olympic snowboarders or astronauts? Team USA’s outfits for PyeongChang look inspired by NASA.]

The United States Forces in Korea said that it also wanted to make sure that the Games were a success.

“We, as allies, are committed to an alliance decision on the exercises and will announce the decision when appropriate,” USFK said in an emailed statement.

North Korea has conducted more than 25 missile launches this year and detonated a huge nuclear device in September, leading to widespread international condemnation.

Nerves are running high in Seoul that Pyongyang may try to disrupt the event, and ticket sales are already disappointing. North Korea has not committed to sending any athletes to the Games, although a figure skating pair has qualified to compete. 

South Korea plans to send about 5,000 troops to the Games, double the number that were dispatched during the 2002 soccer World Cup. 

Every year, North Korea vehemently denounced the joint military exercises as a pre-text for an invasion. 

After this year’s Key Resolve and Foal Eagle drills, the Rodong Sinmun newspaper said that they had been “unprecedentedly provocative and dangerous confrontational hysteria in view of its scale, program and purpose.”

The exercises showed that a nuclear war may break out on the Korean peninsula any moment, the paper, the mouthpiece of the ruling Workers’ Party, said in a commentary.

“War has not yet broken out on the peninsula, the world’s biggest hotspot,” it said, adding that this was entirely due to North Korea’s nuclear deterrent. 

Read more:

South Korean prime minister says he hopes President Trump attends PyeongChang Olympics

South Korea’s Winter Olympics sets off some jitters with just 100 days to go

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