US and South Korea outline visions for cost-sharing on troops, US negotiator says

US and South Korea outline visions for cost-sharing on troops, US negotiator says
South Korean Anti-Aircraft Gun Wheeled Vehicle System participates in the joint river-crossing exercise conducted for South Korean and US soldiers in Yeoncheon, Gyeonggi province, South Korea on 20 March 2024.
PHOTO: Reuters file

WASHINGTON — US and South Korean officials outlined respective visions for a new agreement on sharing the cost of keeping American troops in South Korea in talks this week and will continue to consult as necessary, the chief US negotiator said on Friday (April 26).

The allies named envoys last month to launch early talks for a new deal to take effect in 2026.

South Korean media said the aim was for an agreement before any November election comeback by former President Donald Trump, who during his presidency accused Seoul of "free-riding" on US military might.

Ahead of a first round of talks in Hawaii from Tuesday to Thursday on a so-called 12th Special Measures Agreement (SMA), chief US negotiator Linda Specht said Washington was seeking "a fair and equitable outcome."

In a brief statement on Friday, Specht said: "The US and Republic of Korea outlined their respective visions for the 12th SMA ... We will continue to consult whenever necessary to further strengthen and sustain the Alliance under the 12th SMA."

A senior Biden administration official told Reuters last month the talks were on track and ahead of schedule but the US did not see November as a "hard deadline."

More than 28,000 American troops are stationed in South Korea as part of efforts to deter nuclear-armed North Korea.

South Korea began shouldering the costs of the deployment, used to fund local labour, the construction of military installations and other logistics support, in the early 1990s.

The Federal Reserve meets on Tuesday and Wednesday.

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During Trump's presidency, the sides struggled for months to reach a deal before Seoul agreed to increase its contribution by 13.9 per cent over the previous 2019 pact under which Seoul had paid about US$920 million (S$1.3 billion) annually.

It was the biggest annual rise in nearly two decades.

Trump had demanded Seoul pay as much as US$5 billion a year.

According to the US Government Accountability Office from 2016 through 2019, the US Defence Department spent roughly US$13.4 billion in South Korea to pay military salaries, construct facilities, and perform maintenance, while South Korea provided US$5.8 billion to support the US presence.

The current deal expires in 2025, with negotiations on a successor pact usually held just before the end of the existing one.

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