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Yoon, Biden agree to expand joint military exercises to cope with N.Korea threats
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IANS | 21 May, 2022
South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol and his visiting US counterpart Joe
Biden on Saturday agreed to begin discussions on expanding joint
military exercises between the two countries amid growing nuclear and
missile threats from North Korea.
The two reached the
agreement during their first-ever summit in Seoul, which took place as
both countries believed a nuclear test or intercontinental ballistic
missile launch from the North was imminent and even could happen while
Biden was touring the region, reports Yonhap News Agency.
"Both
leaders agree to initiate discussions to expand the scope and scale of
combined military exercises and training on and around the Korean
Peninsula," a joint statement on the summit said.
Military
exercises between the allies had been scaled back amid the Covid-19
pandemic and as part of efforts to engage the North under the previous
administrations.
Yoon told a joint press conference after the
summit that he and Biden discussed the need to hold "various forms" of
exercises, including under the scenario of a nuclear attack from the
North.
The statement said Biden also reaffirmed the US "extended
deterrence" commitment to South Korea using the "full range of US
defence capabilities, including nuclear, conventional and missile
defence capabilities".
Extended deterrence is the notion that the
US would deploy its full range of military assets to defend its ally,
South Korea, in the event of a contingency.
Securing that
commitment from Biden was seen as particularly important, as the North
continues to advance its weapons programmes, testing missiles on 16
separate occasions this year alone, including its first test of an ICBM
in over four years in March.
Yoon and Biden "condemn the DPRK's
escalatory ballistic missile tests this year", the joint statement said,
referring to North Korea by its official name, the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea.
"President Yoon and I committed to
strengthening our close engagement and work together to take on
challenges of regional security, including addressing the threat posed
by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, by further strengthening
our deterrence posture and working toward a complete denuclearization of
the Korean Peninsula," Biden said at the press conference.
The
two leaders expressed concern over the recent Covid-19 outbreak in North
Korea and offered to work with the international community to provide
assistance to help fight the virus, according to the statement.
Biden told the press conference the US had offered vaccines to North Korea but received no response.
Yoon has previously made repeated offers of vaccines and other medical supplies but has also been met with silence.
On
whether he was open to meeting North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, Biden
said "that would depend on whether he was sincere and whether he was
serious".
Biden's predecessor, Donald Trump, held three meetings
with Kim for ultimately fruitless talks on dismantling the North's
nuclear programme.
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