South Korea, US prepare for early talks on sharing defense costs

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SEOUL — South Korea and the United States have named envoys to launch a new early round of talks on ways to share the cost of keeping American troops in South Korea, the countries said on Tuesday.

The appointment of South Korea’s Lee Tae-woo and the United States’ Linda Specht comes unusually early for a deal set to take effect in 2026, perhaps aimed at reaching agreement before the possible re-election of Donald Trump as US president.

Preparations for the talks had begun, considering that the exercise usually takes more than a year, said Lim Soo-suk, a spokesman for South Korea’s foreign ministry.

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“Both delegations will endeavor to engage in productive consultations that strengthen the combined defense posture and further solidify our alliance,” the ministry and the US State Department said in a joint statement.

But they stopped short of saying when talks would begin.

Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican nomination in the November election, had accused South Korea, a key Asian ally, of “free-riding” on US military might, and demanded that it pay as much as $5 billion a year for the US deployment.

South Korean media have said the planned early talks on the Special Measures Agreement aim at extending a deal to 2026 and beyond, before Trump’s potential comeback.

The current agreement is set to expire in 2025, with negotiations on a successor pact usually held just before the end of the existing one.

During Trump’s presidency, both sides had struggled for months to make progress, before reaching a deal when Seoul agreed to increase its contribution by 13.9%, for the biggest annual rise in nearly two decades.

Lee, a seasoned diplomat with experience in US and security affairs, previously served as consul-general in Sydney and deputy nuclear envoy for North Korea.

Specht is a senior adviser and lead negotiator for security pacts in the State Department’s bureau of political and military affairs.

Some 28,500 American troops are stationed in South Korea as part of efforts to deter nuclear-armed North Korea.

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

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