Russia Warns Against US Military Exercises Aimed at North Korea

April 6th, 2018 - by admin

Jason Ditz / AntiWar.com & Julian Ryall / Deutsche Welle – 2018-04-06 19:27:56

Russia Says US Must Halt Military Activity on Korean Peninsula

Russia Says US Must Halt
Military Activity on Korean Peninsula

Foreign Ministry says wargames
“not helping” efforts to reduce tensions

Jason Ditz / AntiWar.com

(April 5, 2018) — Russia’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement Thursday calling on the United States to immediately halt all military activity on the Korean Peninsula. The US is currently engaged in joint military operations with South Korea.

The spring joint operations are always a source of tension on the peninsula, and Russian officials say they are “not helping” in ongoing efforts to try to reduce military tensions in Korea. The operations have been a problem every year.

This year it hasn’t been as big an issue, however. The joint operations are smaller and only half as long this year because of the Winter Olympics. North Korea has been fine with ignoring the operations this year.

North Korea has planned summits with both South Korea and the United States over the next two months, and doesn’t want to risk damaging the considerable diplomatic progress over the wargames, especially when they’re visibly toned down from recent years.


North Korea Ignores US, South Korea Wargames
Jason Ditz / AntiWar.com

(April 3, 2018) – The US and South Korea have begun their spring wargames a bit late this year, accommodating the Winter Olympics and the Paralympics. The largest of the two nations, many annual exercises, it also tends to be the one fueling the most tensions with North Korea.

This year is different, however. Improved diplomacy has North Korea mum on the exercises this year, likely in no small part because of an upcoming summit with South Korea’s president this month, and a summit with President Trump in May.

It doesn’t hurt, of course, that the wargames themselves are only about half the length they usually are, and involve fewer US troops. In 2018, the joint exercises seem very much a formality, with everyone trying to avoid them having any higher meaning in upcoming talks.

That’s a big change from recent years, where not only were the spring exercises seen as provocative, they appeared to be deliberately so, with the US making sure each year’s operation was bigger than the previous one, and had activities very close to the border.


North Korea Ignores US-South Korea Military Drills
Julian Ryall / Deutsche Welle

(April 2, 2018) — The joint US-South Korea Foal Eagle and Key Resolve military exercises began on Sunday with nearly 300,000 South Korean military personnel and 11,500 US troops involved in a series of field drills and computer-based tabletop exercises.

In previous years, the commencement of Foal Eagle would have provoked a barrage of propaganda from Pyongyang decrying the drills as a prelude to an invasion of the North and the forerunner of a nuclear exchange.

However, North Korea has suspended its rhetoric this year, warning of a conflict engulfing the Korean Peninsula.

The US is also taking a different approach this year: isn’t deploying Rockwell B-1 Lancer bombers based in Guam, and is scaling back the presence of the aircraft carrier strike groups formed around the USS Ronald Reagan and the USS Carl Vinson.

“The exercises are much smaller this year, only about half the size of last year, because the leaders of North and South Korea are planning to hold a summit before the end of the month and there has been good progress on the question of a detente in the last few months,” Ahn Yin Hay, a professor of international relations at Korea University in Seoul, told DW.

Exercises Delayed by Olympics
Traditionally, the exercises would take place earlier in the year, but this year’s Winter Olympic Games in South Korea changed the schedule.

When North Korean leader Kim Jong Un hinted in his New Year’s address that he would be willing to send a North Korean team to the games in order to start building bridges with his long-time ideological rival, the South Korean government was able to convince the US to postpone the exercises until after the games had been concluded.

Many were skeptical of North Korea’s motives – and plenty remain so – but Kim has visited Xi Jinping in China for talks and is scheduled to meet Moon Jae In, his South Korean counterpart, before the end of April.

There is also a broad agreement in place for Kim to meet US President Donald Trump this spring, which would mark a dramatic diplomatic about-face for two leaders that just a few months ago were hurling insults at each other.

“North Korea wanted us [South Korea] to cancel the military exercises entirely as a prerequisite for face-to-face talks between the leaders, but neither Seoul nor Washington could accept that demand,” said Ahn.

“But the feeling is that this is compromise acceptable to both sides – and even Kim said that he understands that the South needs to carry out training drills when he met with Moon’s representatives.”

Broken Promises
Ahn said that there is growing optimism in South Korea that this time the North has come to the negotiating table with a genuine desire to end the political stalemate on the Korean Peninsula, but added that it is “too early” to completely trust the North.

“They have made promises in the past only to break them immediately,” she said. “But this time I believe that the regime has been caused such pain by the sanctions, and in a short period of time, they realized that there was a real threat to their system and that they need a way out.”

Daniel Pinkston, a professor of international relations at the Seoul campus of Troy University, told DW that the “blood-curdling rhetoric” of previous years is taking a back seat this time around because diplomacy appears to be making headway.

“I do believe there is a desire to open a dialogue and channels and to go down the path in the near term,” he said. “And if they are open to dialogue, then propaganda is counterproductive because it is about sowing fear, ratcheting up political pressure and causing panic in Seoul and Washington.”

Pyongyang has not, however, missed every opportunity in recent weeks to claim that its enemies are preparing to invade. Late last month, the South Korean military accepted the first new F-35A Lightning fighter after it rolled off Lockheed Martin’s production lines in Fort Worth, Texas.

A total of six of the aircraft are due to be delivered to the South this year, with 40 more on order and South Korea considering purchasing an additional 20.

After the hand-over ceremony, North Korean state media said the purchase of the fighters “gets in the way of the ongoing peace momentum” on the peninsula, adding that “dialogue and confrontation can never co-exist at the same time.”

The North also objected strongly after the purchase of 90 Taurus air-launched cruise missiles by the South. A joint German-Swedish weapon, the Taurus gives South Korea the ability to hit targets anywhere in the North, but the deal was denounced by state media: “Seoul should put a complete stop to a ‘combat with dialogue’ attitude, which will end in failure.”

At present, the signs are that bilateral and even multilateral talks will indeed take place, bringing the nations of the region back together. It remains to be seen, however, whether agreements can be reached that will conclude with nuclear weapons being removed from the Korean Peninsula.

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