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S. Korea, US to hold key military drills

TOKYO, Aug 7 (KUNA) -- South Korea and the United States will conduct a major joint exercise this month to strengthen their combined readiness posture, the two said Thursday, in the face of evolving North Korean military threats, Yonhap News Agency reported.
The annual Ulchi Freedom Shield exercise is set to take place from August 18-28 and involves drills incorporating "realistic" threats aimed at enhancing the allies' capabilities across all domains, their militaries said.
"The exercise will also support interagency coordination within the ROK government to strengthen national-level crisis management, civil safety response, and cyber defense capabilities, advancing a whole-of-government, joint, intra-agency, and combined approach to wartime readiness and national defense," they said in a statement. ROK refers to the acronym of South Korea's formal name, the Republic of Korea.
Alongside South Korean and US troops, personnel from several member states of the UN Command will join the exercise, while the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission will observe the exercise to monitor compliance with the Armistice Agreement.
The UN Command is an enforcer of the armistice that halted the fighting in the 1950-53 Korean War.
This year's exercise comes as North Korea has denounced combined South Korea-US drills and accused the South of "blindly adhering" to its alliance with Washington, amid Seoul's push to ease tensions with Pyongyang.
North Korea has long denounced the allies' joint exercises as a rehearsal for an invasion against it and has a track record of staging weapons tests in response. In the statement released Thursday, the allies stressed that the upcoming drills are "defensive in nature." (end) mk.aai