Scrapped drill with S Korea would have cost USD 14 mn: Pentagon

AFP  |  Washington 

When announced the US would halt joint military drills with South Korea, he backed his controversial move by citing the "tremendous" costs of such exercises.

Yesterday, the put a dollar amount -- about USD 14 million -- on the costs of Freedom Guardian, a large-scale joint drill that was to kick off in August but which was shelved after Trump met with North Korean leader in a historic summit last month.

"We will be stopping the war games, which will save us a tremendous amount of money, unless and until we see the future negotiation is not going along like it should," Trump said after meeting Kim in a bid to solve the crisis over the North's nuclear weapons.

Trump later added on that the decision would "save a fortune." The approximately USD 14 million is not an insignificant sum, but represents only a tiny portion of the Pentagon's USD 700 billion budget.

Rob Manning, who disclosed the figure, did not provide a breakdown of how it was calculated.

Many of the costs associated with conducting large-scale drills are already baked into a military budget, as troops are continually training regardless of whether a formal exercise is underway.

has about 28,500 troops based in and they routinely train with their local counterparts.

Freedom Guardian, which was to involve about 17,500 US troops, is usually an annual exercise that lasts two weeks. It is based on a computerised command-and-control drill that considers a highly provocative rehearsal for invasion.

Trump faced a backlash for scrapping the drills, with critics saying he gave in too readily to Kim's request to halt the exercises while getting little in terms of tangible commitments from in return.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, July 10 2018. 03:35 IST