Posted on : Nov.13,2019 16:26 KST
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US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo on Nov. 12. (AFP/Yonhap News)
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Gen. Mark Milley’s comments come ahead of scheduled visit to Seoul
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US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo on Nov. 12. (AFP/Yonhap News)
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On Nov. 11, the Pentagon quoted US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley as saying that the “average American” wants to know why countries as wealthy as South Korea and Japan can’t defend themselves. Milley’s remarks, which were reported as he was embarking on a trip to Japan and South Korea, are an attempt to use American public opinion to leverage more pressure on South Korea to increase its financial contribution to the cost of stationing US troops on the Korean Peninsula.
The US Defense Department posted an article to its website on Monday titled “Chairman Travels to Indo-Pacific; Affirms Region’s Strategic Importance” that outlines Milley’s plans to visit Japan and South Korea.
Milley arrived in Japan on Nov. 11 for a two-day stay. He is planning to visit South Korea on Nov. 13 and attend the South Korea-US Security Consultative Meeting (SCM) on Nov. 15 with US Defense Secretary Mark Esper.
While on a military aircraft bound for Japan, Milley told reporters that “the average American looking at the forward deployed US troops in South Korea and Japan ask some fundamental questions: Why are they needed there? How much does it cost? These are very rich and wealthy countries, why can’t they defend themselves?”
“These are main street USA questions. It is incumbent on us [. . .] to make sure we adequately explain how the US military is a stabilizing force in Northeast Asia in preventing and deterring the outbreak of armed conflict,” the general said.
Milley expressed his support for the continuation of South Korea and Japan’s General Security of Military Intelligence Agreement (GSOMIA), which Seoul has decided to terminate at midnight on Nov. 23. Describing GSOMIA as being “key for security and stability in the region,” Milley said, “The United States, South Korea, and Japan are stronger when we are together and shoulder to shoulder.”
“It is clearly in China’s interests and North Korea’s interests, to separate South Korea from Japan and the United States. It is in our interests to keep all three of us very closely aligned.”
By Hwang Joon-bum, Washington correspondent
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