The drills will start with a two-day delay on Tuesday “considering the COVID-19 situation,” South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said on Sunday.
The annual joint drills had been scheduled to begin on Sunday, but were pushed back after a South Korean army officer who was required to join the maneuvers was diagnosed with COVID-19 on Friday, the South’s Yonhap news agency reported.
This year's drills, which are scheduled to end on August 28, will focus on a “combined defense posture,” while exercises for the transition of wartime operational control on the Korean Peninsula will be “partly conducted,” the joint chiefs said in a statement.
Springtime military drills between American and South Korean forces were canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The joint military drills, which usually begin in August, involve tens of thousands of soldiers from both sides. They also include computerized simulations of war scenarios and field training.