The US and South Korea have decided to postpone upcoming military drills in a possible effort to restart denuclearisation talks with North Korea.
"I don't see this as a concession. I see this as a good faith effort ... to enable peace," US Defence Secretary Mark Esper told reporters.
He announced the decision alongside South Korean counterpart Jeong Kyeong-doo in Bangkok.
"I think creating some more space for our diplomats to strike an agreement on the denuclearization of the peninsula is very important."
The drills, known as the Combined Flying Training Event, would have simulated air combat scenarios and involved an undisclosed number of warplanes from both nations.


Turkey to host Gaza meeting amid ceasefire concerns
Tanzania opposition says hundreds killed in vote protests
Turkey sentences 11 people to life in prison over ski resort hotel fire
China sends its youngest astronaut to 'Heavenly Palace' space station
Israel launches more strikes on Gaza overnight, testing fragile truce
Trump-Putin summit cancelled, FT reports
Houthis say 43 detained UN staff to face trial over Israeli attack
Hurricane Melissa leaves 49 dead in Caribbean, churns north
