The Korea Herald

Yoon deserves Nobel Prize for mending ties with Japan: Campbell

- By Son Ji-hyoung (consnow@heraldcorp.com)

Kurt Campbell, deputy secretary of state for the United States, lauded President Yoon Suk Yeol’s effort to settle historical conflicts with Japan and mend bilateral ties, which paved the way for the threeway relationsh­ip of Seoul, Washington and Tokyo as enshrined in the Camp David summit in August last year.

Campbell, formerly the White House’s top Asia aide in the Joe Biden administra­tion, stressed the role of Yoon and Kishida in overcoming the plight of Japan’s atrocities toward South Koreans in the past, and in addressing volatiliti­es in the Indo-Pacific region, specifical­ly from North Korea.

In this regard, Campbell said the two leaders of the East Asian countries deserve a “joint award” of the Nobel Peace Prize, given the gravity of Seoul and Tokyo’s accomplish­ments.

“I think there’s no small part of political courage involved,” Campbell said in a forum hosted by the Washington-based think tank Hudson Institute on Wednesday.

“If you look at all the various awards of the Nobel Peace Prize, there are some wonderful organizati­ons on landmines and a variety of things . ... If you asked me honestly who deserves the award for really doing something that could make a huge difference on the global stage, I would say that should be a joint award between Kishida and Yoon,” Campbell also said.

Yoon’s declaratio­n in March 2023 to improve ties with Japan by leaving history in the past, could be seen as remarkable, Campbell added, because overcoming historical issues is “incredibly difficult” due to interest groups and political groups in both countries “that are determined not to see that improvemen­t or at least on current terms.”

“That’s how important the was,” Campbell said.

South Korea has had one Nobel Peace Prize laureate, the late former President Kim Dae-jung. Kim was awarded in 2000 for his role in reconcilia­tion between the two Koreas, leaving behind the past decades of confrontat­ion on the Korean Peninsula after the Korean War in 1950-53.

During the forum, Campbell said that the three countries should remain committed to “building habits of cooperatio­n” to further develop the trilateral relationsh­ip.

Campbell also said he was confident that the liberal opposition parties in Korea would “take the necessary steps to continue to build on this.”

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