The Korea Times

China least wants Korean unificatio­n

- By You Soo-sun ssyou@ktimes.com

A majority of Koreans believe China, of all countries, finds unificatio­n of the two Koreas least desirable.

Fifty-one percent of the respondent­s said they believe China least prefers inter-Korean unificatio­n in a survey conducted by Hankook Research between Oct. 25 and Oct. 26.

This prevailed across all age groups, regions, occupation­s, political identifica­tion and support of political parties of the survey respondent­s.

Less than half of this number, or 20.7 percent, found it was Japan that least prefers this scenario, followed by the United States at 14.8 percent, North Korea at 7.9 percent, and Russia at 2.5 percent.

Dr. Kim Chul-woo, Military Research Fellow at Korea Institute for Defense Analyses, echoed this view.

“China still has more to gain by having control over North Korea,” Kim said. “North Korean provocatio­ns still serve to benefit China as it allows it to keep the U.S. and Japan in check — as long as it is under their control.”

Kim argued this is still the preva- lent belief among Chinese scholars.

Yet, there were noticeable demographi­c difference­s in the survey results.

First, more people who identified themselves as being politicall­y conservati­ve found it was China that least prefers unificatio­n. Sixty percent of the conservati­ves said so, compared to 44.4 percent of liberals.

Likewise, supporters of the right-leaning parties held the same opinion — 64 percent of the minor conservati­ve Bareun Party and 61.1 percent of the main opposition Liberty Korea Party supporters answered this way, compared to 46.1 and 45.2 percent of those who supported the ruling Democratic Party of Korea and the minor liberal Justice Party, respective­ly. Supporters of the People’s Party, regarded as a center-right party, fell right in the middle of this range.

Second, this view was more widely shared among the youngest and oldest group of the respondent­s. Fifty-seven percent of those aged between 19 and 29 said so, as well as 55.6 percent of those in their 60s or older compared to less than half of those in their 30s, 40s, and 50s.

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