San Diego Union-Tribune

SOUTH KOREA’S YOON SEEKS MORE U.S. HELP

President speaks to Congress, stresses security cooperatio­n

- BY ELLEN KNICKMEYER & STEPHEN GROVES Knickmeyer and Groves write for The Associated Press.

South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol urged ever more strengthen­ing of the U.S.-led security alliance against nuclear-armed North Korea on Thursday, drawing cheers from Congress as he saluted the “great American heroes” who helped preserve his country’s democracy in the Korean War.

Democratic and Republican lawmakers rose to their feet again and again to applaud during Yoon’s address to a joint meeting of the House and Senate, in a speech that stressed security cooperatio­n at a time of increased tension with both North Korea and China. Yoon also cited U.S.-Korean high-tech trade ties creating thousands of jobs in the United States.

Yoon praised the U.S.South Korea security partnershi­p since the Korean War seven decades ago as “the linchpin safeguardi­ng our freedom, peace and prosperity.”

Lawmakers roared with approval when the South Korean leader closed with, “God bless our alliance.” They flocked to him afterward on the House floor, pressing him to sign their written copies of his address.

Yoon’s visit to Washington

has focused on efforts by both countries and other allies in the Indo-Pacific to make their forces stronger, more nimble, better positioned and more resilient in the event of any conflict in the region.

On Wednesday, Yoon and President Joe Biden announced an agreement for intensifie­d nuclear deterrence to counter any North Korean threat. Biden issued a blunt warning that a nuclear attack would “result in the end of whatever regime” took such action.

North Korea over the past year has carried out a record number of ballistic missile launches, demonstrat­ing its ability to strike targets near and far.

The U.S.-South Korean deterrence effort announced this week calls for periodical­ly docking U.S. nuclear-armed submarines in South Korea for the first time in decades and bolstering training between the two countries.

The Biden administra­tion’s aim in improving the allies’ military readiness in the region is not just to deter North Korea but to discourage and defend against any threats from China, which is also a growing security concern.

That concern focuses at present on any possible move against the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which China claims as its territory.

Still, China is an important market for South Korea’s semiconduc­tors and other advanced technology. Yoon’s remarks, while singling out North Korea as a threat to democracy and peace in his region, made no direct mention of China.

Also from the Indo-Pacific, next week Biden will host Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. for Oval Office talks.

Yoon paid tribute Thursday

to the nearly 40,000 American troops who died helping South Korea’s democratic government fight back an attempted takeover by the communist north in the 1950s.

“Korea will never forget the great American heroes who fought with us to defend freedom,” he said.

He singled out the granddaugh­ter of one such Korean veteran, Col. William Weber. Dayne Weber stood and waved from the House Gallery in response, placing her hand over her heart as lawmakers applauded.

Col. Weber lost an arm and leg in 1951 defending Wonju, which is roughly 50 miles east of Seoul. He died last year, after successful­ly advocating for completion of the Korean War Veterans Memorial in Washington.

Yoon, who charmed a White House state dinner the evening before by singing several stanzas of the 1970s pop song “American Pie,” also pointed to economic and cultural bonds forged between the two countries since the war.

Those include a White House visit last year by a Korean pop group with an adoring global following.

“BTS beat me to the White House — but I beat them to Capitol Hill!” Yoon exclaimed.

Yoon’s address marked roughly the 120th time that the House and Senate have met jointly to hear from a foreign leader.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON AP ?? South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol addresses a joint meeting of Congress on Thursday in Washington.
ALEX BRANDON AP South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol addresses a joint meeting of Congress on Thursday in Washington.

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