The Borneo Post

Trump vows to fix or scrap Korea trade deal

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WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump told Reuters he will either renegotiat­e or terminate what he called a ‘horrible’ free trade deal with South Korea and said Seoul should pay for a US anti-missile system that he priced at US$1 billion.

In an interview with Reuters, Trump called the five-year-old trade pact with South Korea ‘unacceptab­le’ and said it would be targeted for renegotiat­ion after his administra­tion completes a revamp of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and Mexico.

He blamed the US-Korean trade deal, known as KORUS, on his 2016 Democratic presidenti­al election opponent, Hillary Clinton, who as secretary of state promoted the final version of the trade pact before its approval by Congress

It’s a horrible deal, and we are going to renegotiat­e that deal or terminate it. Donald Trump, US President

in 2011.

“It is unacceptab­le, it is a horrible deal made by Hillary,” the Republican Trump said.

“It’s a horrible deal, and we are going to renegotiat­e that deal or terminate it.”

Asked when he would announce his intention to renegotiat­e the deal, Trump said: “Very soon. I’m announcing it now.”

Trump’s comments stunned South Korean financial markets, sending Seoul stocks and the won currency into reverse even as the country’s economic outlook has started to brighten.

With global demand improving, exports of goods such as cars and electronic­s have been leading a recovery in South Korea and a number of other trade- reliant Asian economies such as Japan and Taiwan, boosting their manufactur­ing sectors.

“Talk and actual policy are different,” a high-ranking official at South Korea’s finance ministry, who declined to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the media, told Reuters.

“They (the Trump administra­tion) have not requested anything from us so we’ll have to wait and see.”

KORUS was initially negotiated by the Republican administra­tion of President George W. Bush in 2007, but that version was scrapped and renegotiat­ed by President Barack Obama’s Democratic administra­tion three years later.

The US goods trade deficit with South Korea has more than doubled since KORUS took effect in March 2012, from US$ 13.2 billion in 2011 to US$27.7 billion in 2016, according to US Census Bureau data.

Trump said the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system now being deployed in South Korea to defend against a potential missile attack from North Korea would cost about US$1 billion and questioned why the United States was paying for it.

“I informed South Korea it would be appropriat­e if they paid. It’s a billion-dollar system,” Trump said. “It’s phenomenal, shoots missiles right out of the sky.”

Asked about the remarks, South Korea’s defense ministry said in a statement there is no change to the existing agreement that Seoul provides land for the deployment while Washington shoulders the cost of installing and operating the system.

A top foreign policy adviser to South Korean presidenti­al front runner Moon Jae-in told Reuters that Trump’s suggestion would be an ‘impossible option’ because the US military operates the system.

The US military started the deployment of THAAD in early March, despite strong opposition from China, which worries the system’s powerful radar can be used to spy into its territory.

Moon, the favourite to win South Korea’s presidenti­al election on May 9, has called for deployment to be delayed until after the next administra­tion is in place and can review the decision.

Lockheed Martin Corp is the prime contractor for the THAAD system.

A former US State Department official estimated the cost of the system at about US$1.2 billion but said the United States would not want to sell THAAD to Seoul.

“We want to retain THAAD in our arsenal, consistent with all other US weapons systems deployed on the Korean peninsula. We own them. We retain them. We have the right to redeploy them,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. — Reuters

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