The Asian Age

New Prez wants closer Seoul ties with US & India, and to join Quad

- Skand Tayal The writer is a retired diplomat and has served as India’s ambassador to South Korea

President-elect Yoon Suk Yeol (YSY), who will be sworn in as South Korea’s new leader for a five-year term on May 10, is a first-time politician and a former prosecutor-general. He catapulted into politics after helping convict former President Park Geun-hye in her impeachmen­t trial. Yoon Suk Yeol is considered rather unfamiliar with global affairs and is likely to rely on his trusted advisers to frame policy.

Prof. Kim Sung-han, the head of the diplomacy and security division of the incoming President’s transition team, and was vice foreign minister in the 2008-13 Lee Myung-bak administra­tion, is regarded by the South Korean media as the brain behind President-elect Yoon’s foreign policy architectu­re which focuses on reinforcin­g Seoul’s security alliance with Washington by restoring trust between the two countries.

In an article in Foreign Affairs prior to his March 9 election this year, YSY indirectly criticised the current policy of outgoing President Moon Jae-in and said that Seoul’s reluctance to take a firm stand on a number of issues that have riled the relationsh­ip between Washington and Beijing has created an impression that South Korea has been tilting towards China and away from its long-time ally, the United States.

In the campaign, YSY had strongly criticised the Moon government for creating a “master-servant” relationsh­ip between the two Koreas by doggedly pursuing the dialogue with North Korea as an end in itself rather than as a process for negotiatio­ns towards denucleari­sation.

YSY said in an interview to the Washington Post on April 14 that South Korea must step up its foreign policy commensura­te with its economic and cultural status and become a stronger ally of the United States. Yoon aspires to make South Korea a critical player in addressing global challenges — including supply chain management, climate change and vaccine production. In Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Mr Yoon would find a ready partner to work together in pursuing their shared objectives.

On the four-nation Quad (comprising the US, India, Japan and Australia), the President elect has said that before deciding on seeking to join the Quad, South Korea will support and cooperate with its working groups in tackling global issues such as “vaccines, climate change and emerging technologi­es to create a synergy with the Quad countries.”

Mr Yoon called North Korea as South Korea’s “main enemy”, a stance different from that of outgoing President Moon Jae-in, but said that he would continue a two-track response to pursue dialogue and offer humanitari­an aid.

Importantl­y, Mr Yoon has said that poor SeoulTokyo relations have backfired on South Korean companies and have hampered Seoul’s ability to coordinate with Tokyo and Washington. He said South Korea should work to rebuild confidence by having frequent conversati­ons with Japanese officials. He asserted that during his presidency “South Korea-Japan relations will go well”.

This would be a course which friendly democracie­s like the United States and India would encourage. In the shifting strategic balance of the Indo-Pacific, it is of vital importance that all democracie­s work together and harmonise their policies to ensure peace and stability in the region. Any progress towards normalisat­ion of sentiments between South Korea and Japan would positively influence the strategic balance in Northeast Asia.

In parallel, North Korea has been signalling its own frustratio­n over the impasse regarding easing of the crippling sanctions faced by it. In April, Chairman Kim Jong-un vowed to speed up the further developmen­t of its nuclear arsenal “at the fastest possible pace” and threatened to use them against its enemies. On May 4, North Korea launched a ballistic missile towards the East Sea. This was North Korea’s 14th missile firing this year, just six days before the new conservati­ve President takes over in Seoul. Subsequent­ly on May 5, a North Korean propaganda website described the incoming South Korean President as “pro-United States” and “confrontat­ional”.

After being elected, US President Joe Biden was the first foreign leader that YSY called. Subsequent­ly, YSY also spoke to Prime Ministers Fumio Kishida of Japan, Boris Johnson of Britain, Scott Morrison of Australia and Prime Minister Narendra Modi on March 17. China’s Xi Jinping sent a letter of congratula­tions on March 11 and the two spoke on the phone on March 25.

On March 10 itself, Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted his warm congratula­tions to YSY, adding that he looked forward to working with him to further expand and strengthen the IndiaROK “Special Strategic Partnershi­p”. On May 6, India’s ambassador in Seoul, Sripriya Ranganatha­n, called on Mr Yoon when YSY affirmed that India-ROK ties would be scaled up significan­tly by his administra­tion.

New Delhi’s ties with Seoul have gradually flowered after the advent of democracy in South Korea in the 1990s. There is a strong sense of goodwill and friendship towards each other among the leadership as well as people in the two countries. There is strong bipartisan political commitment in both countries to deepen the strategic partnershi­p and scale up trade and investment relationsh­ip. South Korea’s Presidents, of both the liberal and conservati­ve persuasion, have invested in promoting friendly ties with India. In India too, the “Strategic Partnershi­p” establishe­d by the UPA government in 2010 has been strengthen­ed as the “Special Strategic Partnershi­p” by the NDA government.

However, till now, the strategic partnershi­p has been mainly based on economic cooperatio­n as the outgoing South Korean President was wary of rubbing China the wrong way. The incoming Yoon administra­tion may make a more objective and realistic assessment of China as a disruptive and expansioni­st nation responsibl­e for upsetting the peace of the entire IndoPacifi­c region.

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