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US, S. Korea kick off major joint military drills

The United States and South Korea kicked off

their major annual joint military drills on Monday, Seoul said, with new
exercises aimed at containing the nuclear-armed North, including fighting
cyberattacks.

The Ulchi Freedom Shield exercise runs until August 29, with drills this year
set to “reflect realistic threats across all domains”, including from North
Korean missiles and GPS jamming, Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

The exercises will boost the allies’ “capability and posture to deter and
defend against weapons of mass destruction”, the military added.

This year’s drills will involve about 19,000 South Korean troops
participating by land, sea and air, as well as in the cyber and space
domains, according to the defence ministry, which declined to offer details
of the US’s participation.

Pyongyang has floated thousands of trash-carrying balloons across the border
in recent months, and sought to jam South Korean GPS signals as part of its
protest against balloons carrying anti-regime propaganda sent northwards by
activists in the South.

In Seoul, the city government will be simultaneously conducting civil defence
exercises designed to better prepare for any future trash balloons, as well
as North Korean drone attacks.

“We are currently facing the most reckless and irrational North Korean
provocations and threats in the world,” South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol
said at a cabinet meeting Monday, according to his office.

“In recent years, they have not hesitated to launch GPS jamming attacks and
make low-grade provocations such as launching trash balloons.”

US-South Korea drills typically infuriate the North, which views them as
rehearsals for invasion and has frequently conducted weapons tests in
retaliation.

On Sunday, North Korean state media slammed the drills, saying they were
“dangerous and grave”.

Last year, North Korean state media warned the drills could trigger a
“thermonuclear war”, launching a number of cruise missiles and ballistic
missiles in protest.

Kim Myung-soo, head of Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, said last week that
Pyongyang was “likely to use the exercise as a pretext to conduct deceitful
and blitz provocations”.

Kim ordered troops to “closely monitor and analyze the activities of the DMZ”
and “retaliate immediately if the enemy provokes”.

Washington is Seoul’s key security ally and stations about 28,500 troops in
South Korea to protect it from its nuclear-armed neighbour.

The two countries have long carried out joint exercises. (BSS/AFP)

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