The Korea Times

Seoul tells it like it is, but only to US and Japan

- By Yi Whan-woo yistory@koreatimes.co.kr

Is South Korea outspoken when it comes to colliding issues involving other stakeholde­rs in the Korean Peninsula? The answer appears to be “yes” for its two security partners — the United States and Japan — and “no” for North Korea, China and Russia.

Under the Moon Jae-in administra­tion, the motivation­s for these answers are often influenced by the political interest of Moon’s supporters, who are characteri­zed as pro-China, anti-Japan, and open toward cross-border reconcilia­tion.

Take the cases of economic retaliatio­n from China and Japan for example.

Beijing, Seoul’s largest trading partner, targeted South Korean businesses and boycotted their products over the deployment of a U.S. Terminal High Altitude Aerial Defense (THAAD) missile system to the South.

True, the THAAD deployment was during the administra­tion of Moon’s predecesso­r Park Geun-hye.

Even so, South Korea has remained relatively remained low key toward China versus the U.S. and Japan, according to Shin Yul, a political science professor at Myongji University.

“This is because anti-Japan campaigns can woo voters in general regardless of the government­s,” he said. “Anti-U.S. campaigns can be controvers­ial. But they can also work to some extent for progressiv­e-minded voters as long as they do not cross the line.”

Japan has been expanding export restrictio­ns on goods to South Korean companies over a dispute on wartime forced labor, apparently exploiting Seoul’s 54-year trade deficit with Japan that reflects its reliance on Japanese technology.

South Korea has responded by embracing a tit-for-tat strategy — namely axing Tokyo from its list of trusted trade partners.

Seoul also decided to end a Korea-Japan military intelligen­ce-sharing pact, which the U.S. saw as critical for a threeway security alliance and accordingl­y, expressed its disappoint­ment repeatedly. Such disappoint­ment came along with a U.S. move to hike South Korea’s payments in upcoming defense cost-sharing talks.

Given the circumstan­ce, Cheong Wa Dae’s announceme­nt Aug. 30 to seek the early return of U.S. military bases here was seen as a sign of Seoul’s “uneasiness” over their criticism of the dissolutio­n of the Seoul-Tokyo military pact.

Meanwhile, the Moon administra­tion has not been raising its voice against North Korea and Russia over conflictin­g issues as much as it did to Japan and the U.S. recently.

For instance, Cheong Wa Dae did not lodge a protest to Pyongyang over its latest insults against Moon.

 ?? Yonhap ?? Deputy National Security Adviser Kim Hyun-chong expresses concerns over Japan’s export restrictio­ns against South Korea in a televised national address at Cheong Wa Dae, Aug. 28.
Yonhap Deputy National Security Adviser Kim Hyun-chong expresses concerns over Japan’s export restrictio­ns against South Korea in a televised national address at Cheong Wa Dae, Aug. 28.

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