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US, South Korea to resume military exercises after Winter Olympics end

Joint military exercises involving tens of thousands of troops from the United States and South Korea are to be resumed later this year following their earlier postponement for the Winter Olympics, a South Korean defense official said Friday.

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Ben Westcott (CNN)
(CNN) — Joint military exercises involving tens of thousands of troops from the United States and South Korea are to be resumed later this year following their earlier postponement for the Winter Olympics, a South Korean defense official said Friday.

The exercises, codenamed Key Resolve and Foal Eagle, are carried out annually in March and April, usually drawing a fierce response from the North Korean regime.

In 2017, Pyongyang launched multiple missile tests during the joint exercises, as well as holding a massive artillery drill at the end of April.

"Though it is too early to disclose the exact date and size of the planned joint exercises, they will be carried out after the Olympics," Choi Hyun-soo, spokeswoman for the Ministry of National Defense told reporters.

The 2018 Winter Olympics close at the end of February while the Winter Paralympics wrap up with a closing ceremony on March 18.

A separate South Korean Defense Military official told CNN the joint exercises would not be scaled back despite the unusual delay.

"The Key Resolve and Foal Eagle exercises will not be downsized nor exercises be merged into one," he said.

An estimated 3,600 additional US service members were deployed to join the 28,000 US troops already based in South Korea during last year's drills, which included ground, air, naval and special operations field exercises.

The United States and South Korea maintain that the annual exercises, which have been carried out regularly for nearly 40 years, are strictly defensive and non-provocative.

Both exercises, according to US Forces Korea, are designed to "highlight the longstanding military partnership" between the two countries and improve stability and security on the Korean Peninsula.

The announcement that the exercises will continue after the Games comes during a thaw in relations between the two Koreas, who will march together under a unified flag at the Winter Olympics opening ceremony.

The diplomatic breakthrough followed the first face-to-face meetings between representatives from North and South Korea in more than two years, held at the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone between the two countries.

Earlier this month, North Korean state media hailed the talks as "brilliant" for "national reunification." Both countries are still technically having never signed a peace treaty following the end of hostilities in 1953.

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