South Korea, US to conduct major joint military drills starting on Aug 18
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
The exercise will include a scenario of a North Korean missile launch.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
SEOUL - South Korea and the United States will conduct major joint military drills starting on Aug 18, officials said, although they will delay parts of the annual exercises that have been a source of tension with North Korea to later in 2025.
The 11-day annual exercises, called Ulchi Freedom Shield, will be on a similar scale to 2024 but adjusted by rescheduling 20 out of 40 field training events to September, South Korea’s joint chiefs of staff spokesperson Lee Sung-jun said.
The allies agreed to reschedule some parts of the drill to September over factors “including ensuring training conditions during extreme heat and maintaining a balanced combined defence posture year-round”, Mr Lee said at a briefing.
2025’s drill will test an upgraded response to heightened North Korean nuclear threats as well as cutting-edge technologies used in modern wars, Mr Lee said, citing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.
The exercise will include a scenario of a North Korean missile launch, but will not cover a potential nuclear test by Pyongyang, he said. The decision to spread out the scheduling included reasons such as extreme weather, Mr Lee said, denying there were any political factors behind the move.
The drills are due to be staged as the new South Korean government of President Lee Jae Myung seeks to improve strained ties with Pyongyang
A senior official from South Korea’s Unification Ministry, which manages relations between the Koreas, said on Aug 7 that the delay in some training exercises was aimed at easing tensions with North Korea, the Yonhap News Agency reported.
Some analysts were sceptical about Pyongyang’s response.
“North Korea won’t be satisfied with the adjustment at all,” said Mr Cheong Seong-chang, vice-president at the Sejong Institute in Seoul, a research centre on North Korean affairs.
“What the regime wants is the termination of the drills with the US, not a slight rescheduling,” said Mr Cheong.
On Aug 4, South Korea removed loudspeakers
So far North Korea has rebuffed such overtures by Seoul.
Ms Kim Yo Jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, recently said that South Korea’s decision to stop the broadcasts was “not the work worthy of appreciation,” state media KCNA reported. REUTERS

