US, South Korea to start annual military drills from April 1

Soldiers march during a grand military parade celebrating the 70th founding anniversary of the Korean
Soldiers march during a grand military parade celebrating the 70th founding anniversary of the Korean Reuters (Representational Image)

The Pentagon has announced that the annual military drills between the US and South Korea will start from April 1, the media reported on Tuesday.

"US Secretary of Defence James N. Mattis and the South Korea Minister of National Defence Song Young-moo have agreed to resume the annual combined exercises including Foal Eagle and Key Resolve which were de-conflicted with the schedule of the Olympic Games" Pentagon spokesman Col. Rob Manning said in a statement issued late Monday.

"The exercises are expected to resume April 1, at a scale similar to that of the previous years."

Manning added: "The UN Command has notified the Korean People's Army (North Korea's army) on the schedule as well as the defensive nature of the annual exercises."

This year's Foal Eagle field training exercises will involve about 11,500 US forces and some 290,000 South Korean troops, according to Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Christopher Logan.

The exercise was originally supposed to take place during the Winter Olympics, which were held last month in Pyeongchang, South Korea, CNN reported.

However, US and South Korean officials opted to postpone it until after the Olympics and the Paralympics, which ended on Sunday.

South Korea has said the postponement was part of an effort to reduce tensions with North Korea and help ensure a successful Olympics, while US officials have maintained that the postponement was due to logistics and a need to "de-conflict" the exercise with the Olympic Games.

Monday's announcement comes as US President Donald Trump readies for a potential major summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, which could take place in May. (IANS)

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