The
United States and South Korea agreed yesterday to delay their joint
military exercises until after the Winter Olympics next month in an
apparent move to de-escalate tensions with Pyongyang.
The
announcement came just hours after US President Donald Trump said that
high-level talks set for next week between North and South Korea were “a
good thing”.
Tensions have spiralled in recent months after North
Korea held multiple missile launches and its sixth and most powerful
nuclear test – purportedly of a hydrogen bomb. Trump has also traded
personal insults with his North Korean counterpart Kim Jong-un, rattling
regional allies.
But the last few days has witnessed a rare
softening of tone on both sides of the demilitarised zone after Kim
offered an olive branch to Seoul during a New Year’s speech, saying he
was willing to send a team to next month’s Winter Olympics in the South.
The
tentative rapprochement took a further step on Thursday after South
Korean president Moon Jae-in spoke to Trump by telephone with both
agreeing to suspend joint military drills, a regular source of
Pyongyang’s ire.
“The two leaders agreed to de-conflict the
Olympics and our military exercises so that United States and Republic
of Korea forces can focus on ensuring the security of the Games,” the
White House said in a statement.
Moon’s office said the South Korean
president told Trump that delaying the exercises would help ensure the
success of the Winter Olympics — being hosted by the South next month in
Pyeongchang — “in case the North does not make any more provocations”.
After
a year that saw tensions on the Korean peninsula spike to their worst
levels in years, 2018 has begun on a tentatively warmer note with Seoul
responding positively to Kim’s New Year speech.
On Wednesday the
two Koreas restored a cross-border hotline that had been shut down since
2016. They also agreed to hold high-level talks next week — the first
since 2015 — which will focus on “matters of mutual interest”, including
the North’s participation in the Winter Olympics.
North Korea’s
young leader has shrugged off a raft of new sanctions and heightened
rhetoric from Washington as his regime drives forward with its weapons
programmes, which it says are meant to defend against US aggression.
While
Trump called the talks a “good thing” in a tweet on Thursday, his
ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, struck a much more
cautious tone earlier in the week.
“We won’t take any of the talks
seriously if they don’t do something to ban all nuclear weapons in North
Korea,” she said on Tuesday.
A State Department spokeswoman also
warned that Pyongyang’s olive branch may be an attempt to “drive a wedge
of some sort” between Washington and Seoul.
The White House
statement announcing the suspension of drills said both Trump and Moon
“agreed to continue the campaign of maximum pressure against North Korea
and to not repeat mistakes of the past”.
Pyongyang’s missile and
nuclear tests has seen the isolated state slapped with painful new
sanctions that even its key ally China have backed.
But South Korea
and Washington’s regular joint military drills have also been
criticised by some as adding to regional tensions, particularly by
Beijing and Moscow who have both called for them to be suspended.
Russia’s
deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov on Thursday said he “welcomed”
the halting of drills during the Olympics. News agency RIA Novosti
quoted him as saying that Moscow “observes with satisfaction” that their
calls to halt the manouevres have been “taken into account”. Kim’s New
Year address also included a warning to the US that he has a “nuclear
button” on his table, prompting a furious response from Trump via
Twitter that Washington’s nuclear button was “much bigger and more
powerful”.
The tweet generated responses both on Twitter and from analysts largely of scorn and alarm.
North Korea’s government officers depart for this year’s first weekly labour workday at a farm near Pyongyang yesterday.