Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

North Korea puts strain on South Korea-U.S. partnershi­p

Close allies are at odds over policy

- By Choe Sang-hun

The New York Times

SEOUL, South Korea — For nearly seven decades, the United States and South Korea have been the closest of allies. Their soldiers have served together not just on the Korean Peninsula but in Vietnam, Afghanista­n and Iraq. And under America’s protective umbrella, the South Korean economy has soared.

Now, as North Korea carries out a series of provocativ­e missile and nuclear bomb tests, that alliance is straining at a time when both nations may need it more than ever.

The U.S. has called for a vote Monday on a U.N. resolution that would impose the toughest-ever sanctions on North Korea and could lead to a showdown with the country’s biggest trading partner China and its neighbor Russia.

The Trump administra­tion dropped the one-on-one U.S. negotiatio­ns with China to hammer out a resolution that took weeks and was a hallmark of all previous sanctions measures. For this resolution, a totally American draft was circulated Tuesday with a vote set six days later.

Several diplomats say the U.S. demand for a speedy council vote is aimed at putting maximum pressure on China.

In recent days, President Donald Trump issued a blast of antagonist­ic recent comments that have made South Koreans doubt that they can take the alliance for granted any longer.

On Twitter on Aug. 31, he declared that “talking is not the answer!” in dealing with North Korea, casting aside the push by the new South Korean president, Moon Jaein, to hold talks with the North. On Sept. 2, he threatened to withdraw the U.S. from a 5-year-old free trade agreement with South Korea over what he considers its unfair protection­ist policies. And last Sunday, after North Korea detonated its most powerful nuclear device yet, he essentiall­y called the SouthKorea­ns appeasers.

“South Korea is finding, as I have told them, that their talk of appeasemen­t with North Korea will not work, they only understand one thing!” Mr. Trump said on Twitter.

The tone of Mr. Trump’s statements stunned officials here and underscore­d what unlikely partners he and Mr. Moon are, at a time when their countries’ 67year-old military alliance faces an ever-more-dangerous regime in Pyongyang.

Mr. Moon, who was elected in May promising to seek dialogue with North Korea, fired back at Mr. Trump, insisting that the crisisbe resolved peacefully.

“We can never tolerate another catastroph­ic war on this land,” his office said in a statement last Sunday evening. “We will not give up our goal of working together with allies to seek a peaceful denucleari­zation of the Korean Peninsula.”

Mr. Moon has supported Mr. Trump’s push for tougher sanctions against North Korea, and in a call Monday, their first since the nuclear test last Sunday, the two leaders agreed to lift the weight limit on South Korean convention­al warheads, said Park Soo-hyun, a spokesman for Mr. Moon. Removing the 500-kilogram restrictio­n, part of a treaty with the U.S. aimed at preventing a regional arms race, could give the South greater power to strike the North in the event of military conflict.

Mr. Moon and Mr. Trump also agreed to “push for maximum pressure and sanctions against North Korea” at the U.N. Security Council, Mr.Park said.

But Mr. Moon has argued that sanctions and pressure alone have failed to stop the North’s advances in nuclear and missile technology. And while Mr. Trump has threatened North Korea with “fire and fury,” Mr. Moon has said there must be a peaceful solution because South Koreans, not Americans, would bear thebrunt of war.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States