Post Tribune (Sunday)

President Moon personifie­s South Korea success

- Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen distinguis­hed professor at Carthage College and author of “After the Cold War.” acyr@carthage.edu

The summit in Washington on April 11 between President Moon Jae-in of South Korea and President Donald Trump of the United States deserves much greater attention than has been received. South Korea has great and growing internatio­nal influence, and plays a pivotal role on the Korea Peninsula.

Instead, the mass media has focused considerab­le emphasis on related Trump statements. In advance of the session with Moon, he said progress toward agreement with North Korea is still possible. He said something similar after the summit.

A summit meeting in February in Hanoi, Vietnam, between Kim Jong-un of North Korea and Trump ended abruptly with disappoint­ment. The first meeting between Trump and Kim took place in Singapore in June 2018.

An important goal of the South Korea president in visiting Washington was to ensure that conversati­ons between the communist North and the U.S. continue. Trump’s statements are encouragin­g in this regard. This result doubtless reflects in part skillful groundwork behind the scenes by South Korea’s diplomats and other government officials, working with their American counterpar­ts.

President Moon faces challenges but with considerab­le strengths. He took office on May 10, 2017, following a special election and in a time of uncertaint­y on both sides of the 38th Parallel, the border that divides Korea into north and south. South Korea had just experience­d the ordeal of impeachmen­t and removal from office of a sitting president, Park Geun-hye.

She is now in prison in Seoul after conviction on corruption charges, serving a 25-year sentence. The former president is the daughter of General Park Chunghee, who emerged from a military coup in the early 1960s to lead South Korea as dictator until his assassinat­ion in 1979.

Moon brings diverse, impressive and useful experience to the top post. His father was a refugee from North Korea. During

Moon’s youth, he was arrested and spent some time in prison because of activism against the dictatorsh­ip of Park Chung-hee. Reflecting that experience, he decided to pursue a career as a human rights lawyer.

He also served in the Republic of Korea army special forces, and saw action in the DMZ (Demilitari­zed Zone) along the 38th Parallel. Later, he was chief of staff to President Roh Moo-hyun. In the 2012 presidenti­al election, he finished a close second to Park Geun-hye.

On May 14, 2017, North Korea greeted the inaugurati­on of President Moon in South Korea with a launch test of yet another longrange missile. The new Hwasong-12 missile reached a greater height than six others tested that year. The missile reportedly could reach as far as Guam, where the U.S. maintains military facilities.

Yet North Korea remains in desperate economic condition. At the same time, Choe Son-hui, head of the North Korea foreign ministry’s North America bureau, stated publicly and prominentl­y that her government was interested in serious dialogue with the U.S.

South Korea’s president has devoted sustained attention to exploratio­n of fresh communicat­ion with the North. His flexible stance contrasts with his two predecesso­rs, Presidents Park and, earlier, Lee Myung-bak.

Washington as well as Beijing, Tokyo and others should encourage this. Seoul has the high ground regarding Pyongyang not only in moral terms, but also in the hard realities of economic and military strength. In practical terms, this is now happening. The North Korea regime in Pyongyang now deals with both Washington and Seoul.

In diplomacy, historical­ly and currently, the greatest progress results from sustained effort.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP ??
NICHOLAS KAMM/GETTY-AFP
 ?? Arthur I. Cyr ??
Arthur I. Cyr

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