Los Angeles Times

SOUTH KOREAN LEADER IS WARY OF U.S.

The new president adds uncertaint­y to dealings with North.

- By Matt Stiles and Laura King

SEOUL — South Korea’s left-leaning new president, vowing to unite a nation bruised by a historic corruption scandal, takes power as North Korea flexes its nuclear muscles and Washington sends mixed signals over rising tensions on the Korean peninsula.

The landslide election win by Moon Jae-in, who favors talks with North Korea and is wary of too much dependence on Washington, throws a new element of uncertaint­y into the Trump administra­tion’s dealings with North Korea’s isolated and mercurial leader, Kim Jong Un.

Moon, a lawyer and former presidenti­al aide representi­ng the center-left Democratic Party, pledged in a midnight victory speech to restore the public’s faith in the country after a tumultuous six months that saw the ouster and arrest of the former president, Park Geun-hye.

Under the circumstan­ces, with Park jailed and the prime minister serving as a caretaker, Moon was ex-

pected to take office almost immediatel­y. No elaborate inaugurati­on is scheduled.

“My fellow Koreans, I will not forget what you have asked for as a nation, as a people,” Moon told a large crowd in a central square where protesters have gathered in recent months.

“I will work toward putting our country back on its feet and helping all of you realize your dreams, as Koreans.”

The White House, in a brief statement, offered congratula­tions and expressed hopes for a continuing close partnershi­p with the government in Seoul.

Moon’s lopsided victory — he received 41% of the vote in a field of more than a dozen candidates, nearly double that of second-place finisher Hong Joon-pyo — was widely expected by policymake­rs in Washington and elsewhere, muting its immediate impact.

But going forward, the relationsh­ip Moon forges with Trump will be heavily influenced by the White House response to North Korea’s nuclear testing program and the communist government’s efforts to build an interconti­nental ballistic missile that could deliver a warhead to U.S. shores, analysts said.

In recent weeks, Trump has engaged in both heavyhande­d saber-rattling and seeming outreach toward North Korea’s leader — sometimes within a span of days.

Some analysts pointed to Trump’s declaratio­n last week that he would be “honored” to meet with Kim under the right circumstan­ces as perhaps dovetailin­g with Moon’s stated willingnes­s to engage the North.

Trump also warned North Korea, however, that bellicose acts would carry the potential for “major, major conflict.”

Last month, Trump said he had dispatched a powerful “armada” — a Navy aircraft carrier task force — to sail toward the Korean peninsula as Washington was strongly cautioning Kim not to conduct a sixth nuclear test.

Days later, the Navy acknowledg­ed that the warships were going in the opposite direction at the time to engage in exercises with Australia’s navy. The U.S. task force, led by the Carl Vinson, ultimately steamed north to within range of Korea.

Trump also caused an uproar in South Korea last month when he suggested that Seoul should foot the $1billion bill for an advanced missile defense system — an assertion that his national security advisor, H.R. McMaster, subsequent­ly walked back, according to South Korean officials.

Moon has questioned the decision by the previous South Korean administra­tion and U.S. officials to install the missile defense system known as THAAD, or Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, and called for a review of the decision to make it operationa­l.

China strongly opposes putting the system in South Korea, arguing that its sophistica­ted radar could undermine China’s military capabiliti­es. U.S. officials insist the antimissil­e system is aimed only at North Korea.

Some analysts said Trump’s seeming changeabil­ity added greater unpredicta­bility to the standoff with North Korea, and U.S. relations with Seoul, than did the results of Tuesday’s election in South Korea.

Trump “has made the U.S. into this big question mark as an alliance partner,” said Katharine Moon, a political science professor at Wellesley College in Massachuse­tts and a nonresiden­t senior fellow at the nonpartisa­n Brookings Institutio­n.

In the past, she said, even serious difference­s between U.S. and South Korean leaders — and strong antiAmeric­an sentiment among parts of South Korean society — did not pose a significan­t threat to an alliance forged in the Korean War more than 60 years ago.

“Moon [Jae-in] has said he wants South Korea to follow a more independen­t path vis-a-vis the United States, but that does not mean reneging on the alliance,” she said.

South Korea has been in political limbo for months. Park, the former president, was impeached last December in a corruption scandal and officially removed from office in March.

Given the domestic turmoil, Moon Jae-in is likely to move swiftly to try to establish Seoul’s place as a decision-making partner to Washington when it comes to dealing with North Korea, analysts said.

“There are lots of opportunit­ies and lots of pitfalls,” said Jae Ku, the director of the U.S.-Korea Institute at the School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies at Johns Hopkins University. “That’s why it makes it so important for the new administra­tion to have early meetings with President Trump.”

Trump is expected to visit Asia this year, but the White House has not yet said if he will visit Seoul.

Heading into the vote, South Koreans appeared determined to put the scandal behind them and turn a new page. Nearly 80% of voters went to the polls to decide who would lead the country.

Moon, 64, had consistent­ly led public opinion polls during the campaign. A final survey showed him ahead with about 40% support in a crowded field of 15 candidates. A plurality was all that was needed for victory.

The new leader’s ascension to the Blue House — South Korea’s presidenti­al complex, named for its distinctly colored tile roof — should represent an ideologica­l shift from two administra­tions of conservati­ve policies, especially on foreign affairs.

Senior U.S. lawmakers called the U.S.-South Korean relationsh­ip crucial for both countries.

“With threats in the region escalating, it is vital that the United States and South Korea continue to work together,” Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a joint statement with the committee’s ranking Democrat, Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island.

 ?? Chung Sung-Jun Getty Images ?? NEWLY ELECTED President Moon Jae-in will probably move quickly to try to establish Seoul’s place as a decision-making partner to Washington when it comes to dealing with North Korea, analysts say.
Chung Sung-Jun Getty Images NEWLY ELECTED President Moon Jae-in will probably move quickly to try to establish Seoul’s place as a decision-making partner to Washington when it comes to dealing with North Korea, analysts say.

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