North Korea鈥檚 Kim Yo Jong says US-South Korea drills to harm regional stability

SEOUL 鈥 North Korea鈥檚 Kim Yo Jong, the sister of leader Kim Jong Un, said US-South Korea military drills that began this week were a 鈥減rovocative and aggressive war rehearsal鈥 that would harm regional stability, state media KCNA reported on Tuesday.
The annual Freedom Shield military exercises revealed the allies鈥 鈥渉abitual hostile policy鈥 toward North Korea and 鈥渨ill further destroy regional stability,鈥 Ms. Kim said in a statement.
Ms. Kim described the drills in South Korea as involving more than 18,000 South Korean and US forces and being staged 鈥渄ay and night across the territorial ground, sea, air, outer space and cyberspace鈥 of North Korea.
She said the display of military force could 鈥渓ead to terrible consequences that are unimaginable.鈥
Recent global geopolitical crises and various international events demonstrate that in all military maneuvers carried out by hostile forces, there is no distinction between defense and offense, nor between drills and actual combat, Ms. Kim said.
South Korea and the United States have said the drills, which run from March 9 to 19, were 鈥渄efensive in nature鈥 and would incorporate deterrence scenarios related to North Korea鈥檚 nuclear weapons.
The exercise will also serve as an opportunity to support ongoing preparations for the transfer of US wartime operational control to South Korea, officials from both countries have said.
South Korea aims to complete the handover of military command from the US before President Lee Jae Myung鈥檚 term ends in 2030.
Analysts say the drills come at a sensitive time for North Korea, as it witnesses the US and Israel carry out leadership鈥憈argeting operations against Iran that may reinforce Pyongyang鈥檚 reliance on its nuclear capacity.
Ms. Kim鈥檚 remarks that offensive power is the most reliable deterrent 鈥渞eflects a determination not to suffer the same fate as Iran, serving as both a justification for self-defense and a renewed message at home and abroad that giving up nuclear weapons would mean doom,鈥 said Lim Eul-chul, a North Korea expert at South Korea鈥檚 Kyungnam University.
The US-South Korea drills follow North Korea鈥檚 ruling Party Congress in February, where leader Mr. Kim said he would focus on expanding his country鈥檚 nuclear arsenal. 鈥 Reuters


