Weekend Herald

Stakes high for Trump-Kim summit

Many in Seoul fear US alliance with South Korea could be in jeopardy

- Hyung Jin Kim in Seoul

As US President Donald Trump seeks a nuclear deal with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un next week in Vietnam, some in Seoul are wondering if the fate of Washington’s decades-long military alliance with South Korea could be at stake.

Much of this worry is linked to Trump’s repeated assertions that the US military deployment in South Korea is too costly, and to his surprise suspension of some US military exercises with South Korea as a concession to Kim after their first summit in Singapore last year. Added to this concern are policies by South Korea’s liberal President Moon Jae In that critics say favour engagement with North Korea at the expense of the alliance with Washington.

The broader United States-South Korean alliance, sealed during the bloodshed of the 1950-53 Korean War, won’t be on the negotiatin­g table during the summit in Hanoi on February 27 and 28. But some observers say its longterm future could be in doubt and that Trump may eventually withdraw some of the 28,500 US troops deployed in South Korea.

“The Korea-US alliance is seriously ill now,” Kim Taewoo, the former head of the government-funded Korea Institute for National Unificatio­n in South Korea, said in a recent speech.

US and South Korean officials maintain that everything is fine.

After agreeing to increase its contributi­on to the cost of the US military presence this year, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said last week that Washington insists it has no plans to adjust troop levels. During a phone call with Moon this week, Trump also said that US-South Korea relations are better than ever, according to Moon’s office.

Trump said earlier this month that he had no plans to withdraw troops, but he has previously threatened to pull them from South Korea and Japan if those nations refused to pay more. After the Singapore summit, Trump also told reporters: “I want to bring our soldiers [in South Korea] back home.”

While announcing the suspension of a major summertime military drill, Trump called the exercises “very provocativ­e” and “tremendous­ly expensive”.

US defence officials are not planning any troop reductions but some have indicated that they would not be surprised if Trump puts reductions on the table as part of his negotiatio­ns with Kim. Other possibilit­ies that worry many in Seoul include that Trump will suspend or drasticall­y downsize another major set of military drills this year, or that he’ll settle for a deal where the North abandons its long-range missile programme aimed at the US while not addressing the North’s shorter-range missiles targeting Seoul and Tokyo.

An extended stoppage of comprehens­ive training between the allies could weaken the militaries’ fighting capacity, especially since many US soldiers rotate out of South Korea after less than a year of service, some experts say. “Soldiers’ fighting power comes from training. If there aren’t any [big] joint drills for one year, we’ll have [US] soldiers who have never experience­d such drills,” said Moon Seong Mook, an analyst for the Seoulbased Korea Research Institute for National Strategy.

North Korea, on the other hand, which has described the drills as preparatio­n for invasion and responded with its own costly exercises, would likely benefit. North Korea has said it was forced to develop nuclear weapons to cope with what it calls American hostility.

During the Singapore summit, Kim said he was committed to the “complete denucleari­sation of the Korean Peninsula”, which has previously meant the North would only denucleari­se when the US withdraws all its troops from South Korea and stops military drills with the South. In December, North Korea’s state media said it would never unilateral­ly abandon its nuclear programme unless Washington first removes its nuclear threat.

Some are also concerned about reports that Trump may agree to declare the end of the Korean War, which ended with an armistice, as a security guarantee for the North. Such a declaratio­n, considered as a preliminar­y step before signing a peace treaty to formally end the war, could provide the North with a basis to step up its calls for a US troop pullout.

“If our security is shaken, foreign investment­s will be driven out of the country and stock prices will plummet,” said the analyst Moon, a retired brigadier general who took part in numerous military talks with North Korea.

Part of the debate in South Korea reflects a deep historical division over the US military.

For some, the US military rescued South Korea from the surprise North Korean invasion that started the Korean War. Others blame the US for the 1945 division of the Korean Peninsula. Rallies that focus on the US, both pro and anti, routinely take place in Seoul, but surveys show a majority of South Koreans support the US troop deployment.

Since the war, the US has stationed tens of thousands of troops in South Korea to guard against North Korean attack. Meanwhile, South Korea has grown into an economical­ly prosperous, faithful ally that has taken part in US-led wars in Vietnam, Iraq and elsewhere. US troop numbers have gradually fallen over the decades.

 ??  ?? Donald Trump
Donald Trump
 ??  ?? Kim Jong Un
Kim Jong Un

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