Current
US-China Relations
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part 1: The lame duck and the greenhorn
Part 2: The challenge of unilateralism
Part 3: Dynamics of the Korea crisis
Part 4: Proliferation, imperialism - and the 'China threat'
Part 5: Kim Il-sung and China
Part 6: Korea under Park Chung-hee
Part 7: Clinton's belated path to peace
Part 8: Bush's bellicose policy on N Korea
Part 9: The North Korean perspective
Part 10: The Changing South Korea Position
This article appeared in AToL on
February 7, 2007
South Korean domestic politics has been evolving along two
parallel paths since the Cold War was declared ended by US
President Bush Sr. and USSR President Gorbachev in the Malta summit of December 1989 and formally ended in
1991 with
the dissolution of the Soviet Union. One path
moves
towards increasing resistance to US domination to the point of rising
anti-US
sentiments. Another path moves toward closer ties with neighboring China,
a country of shared cultural affinity, and with the largest population
in the
world, as it adopts a rapid economic development policy of “peaceful
rise”.
Both paths lead to moderation of Cold War ideological hostility in the
South towards
its estranged Northern fraternal state across the 38th
Parallel.
While superpower Détente between the US and the USSR
unraveled with the June 1972 Watergate scandal that eventually brought
down
President Richard Nixon in August 1974, left in deep freeze by the
anti-Soviet
bias of Zbigniew Brzezinksi, President Jimmy Carter’s National Security
Advisor, and finally pronounced dead with the election of Ronald Reagan
in 1980,
Nordpolitik became South Korean policy. It was named in 1983 after West
Germany’s Ostpolitik by then South
Korean
Foreign Minister Lee Bum Suk but not formally announced until the 1988
Olympics
in Seoul. Nordpolitik was
a policy of
reaching out to the People’s Republic of China
and the USSR,
Cold War allies of North Korea,
with the hope that normal relations with these two neighboring major
powers
would provide new economic opportunities for South
Korea, particularly in China,
and would also moderate North Korean belligerence.
Nordpolitik later became the signature
foreign policy of South Korea
under President Roh Tae-Woo, whose name is pronounced “No”, South
Korea’s first democratically elected
president, albeit in a highly orchestrated electoral process, whose
term ran
from 1988 to 1993. After the Cold War, Nordpolitk became the Sunshine
Policy
articulated in 1998 by President Kim Dae Jung who received the Nobel
Peace
Price for it.
A New Kind of Leader
A new kind of leader emerged in South
Korea out of the new domestic politics
in
the new millennium. Roh Moo-Hyun, also pronounced “No”, a liberal
democrat, was
elected president on December
19, 2002. Born August 6, 1946 in Gimhae,
Gyeongsang-namdo province of poor farming parents who struggled hard to
give their
children the benefit of at least some basic education, Roh attended Busan
Vocational High
School
on a scholarship. After graduation, he worked with a fishing net
company for
subsistent wage. Aiming to be a lawyer, but unable to afford college,
he studied
law after work at home and ten years later, after what Roh calls the
ten hardest
years of his life, the self-taught lawyer passed the bar on his fourth
try in
1975.
“Every
time I look back on my life, I am suddenly engulfed
in a certain feeling. It is a kind of shame,” Roh wrote in his
autobiography, Common Sense or Hope. “It is
exceptional, in a society which puts so much stress on one’s
educational
background, that a man with only a vocational high school diploma was
elected
president.”
Roh defended one of several student members of a book club named
Burim that studied leftist theories who were detained and tortured for
almost
two months by the government in what came to be known in Korean history
as the
Burim Incident. The experience affected Roh fundamentally, launching
him on the
career path of a dedicated human rights lawyer, defending other student
protesters and striking workers. An activist in the pro-democracy
movement, he joined
the Democratic Citizens Council in 1985. By 1987, he became director of
the Busan
office of the Citizens’ Movement for a Democratic Constitution.
During 1987, Roh participated in the June Struggle
demonstrations for direct presidential elections. By September, Roh was
arrested during a protest at Daewoo Shipbuilding and spent three weeks
in
prison for aiding and abetting striking workers, resulting in a
suspension of
his license to practice law.
Forbidden to practice law, Roh turned to politics, using his
high profile record in the pro-Democracy front to win election to the
National
Assembly in 1988. He held the seat for only one term, losing it after
quitting
his party in protest of a political merger he opposed. His
early efforts in politics were less than
successful. From 1988 to 2000, Roh won only two out of six elections.
In 1992,
Roh ran again for a National Assembly seat as a member of a new party,
representing his home base of Pusan,
and lost. In 1995, he ran for mayor of Pusan
and lost. In 1998, Roh tried once more for the National Assembly, this
time
from Seoul, and won a
two-year
term. In 2000, Roh returned to Pusan
to run for the National Assembly and lost once again. Despite another
election
disappointment in 2000, a grassroots groundswell of support kept Roh
from quitting
his failing political career in despair. Two and a half years later, on
December
19, 2002, amid a changing
political climate, Roh won the presidency on the Millennium Democratic
Party (MDP)
ticket by a clear majority.
President Roh, the most progressive to date of South Korea’s
political leaders, emphasized his independence for US influence by
boasting
during his presidential campaign that he had “never set foot on
American soil,”
adding defiantly: “What’s wrong with anti-Americanism?” He hinted that,
should
relations with the US
turn confrontational, South Korea
might take sides with China.
Reflective of the new politics, a campaign focused on ending labor
conflicts,
bridging regional rivalries and working with North
Korea gave Roh Muh-hyun the presidency
of a
changing Republic of Korea
in January 2003..
As a dark horse candidate, Roh campaigned on a willingness
to negotiate with the North even after Pyongyang
announced in October 2002 that it was actively pursuing a nuclear
weapons
program. His victory showed that most South Koreans do not regard the
North’s
nuclear weapon program as a threat to the South but as deterrence
against US
attack on the North. Despite decades of ideological estrangement, South
Koreans
do not want to see a US
nuclear attack on their Northern brother. Such attacks would also have
unspeakably adverse effects on the South including a severe anti-US
backlash.
The historical precedent of the US
dropping two atomic bombs on Japan
shows that another US
nuclear attack in another Asian adversary is not unthinkable, unless North
Korea develops an effective nuclear
deterrence.
Most South Koreans feel privately that a unified Korea
with nuclear weapons would not be a bad thing., but few will publicly
say so. Still,
as president, Roh has since explained, to avoid confrontation with the US,
that his desire to keep open lines of communication does not mean he
condones
the North’s nuclear strategy as it is perceived by the US.
“Regardless of what defensive strategy North
Korea embraces, the series of nuclear
measures taken by it is not desirable for peace and stability in Northeast
Asia, including the Korean
Peninsula,”
Roh said. “It will not
promote stability and prosperity for North
Korea.
North Korea
must withdraw its recent nuclear measures and restore the relevant
facilities
and equipment to their original state.” Left unspoken publicly is a
private call
for the US
to
avoid pushing North Korea
down a path of no return.
Economics Influences
Politics
Yet, despite popular support for his conciliatory North
Korea policy, Roh was dealt a sharp
political setback in the May
31, 2006
local elections on account of domestic and economics issues. In both
the mayoral
and local council elections, Roh’s Uri Party received only 30% of the
votes
cast, winning none of the mayoral seats except one in North
Jolla
province. The ruling Uri Party lost every race -- six parliamentary,
seven
mayoral and gubernatorial, and 31 local legislative, including Roh’s
hometown
-- and failed to regain its majority in the National Assembly. Uri
Party chairman
Chung Dong-young resigned over the dismal election results, and
although he was
immediately replaced by Health and Welfare Minister Kim Geun-tae, there
was
serious danger that the ruling party itself could break up to leave Roh
without
political support in his final lame-duck year of office.
Uri party members were shaken by the sudden resignation of party
chairman Chung, a potential presidential candidate. In his resignation
speech,
Chung said: “[We] must accept the people’s punishment of our party in a
prudent
and humble manner … we have failed to win public approval of our
policies.” The
party received another shock as former Prime Minister Goh Geon, a
highly popular
public figure, announced he was recruiting pragmatic reformers to
create a new
bipartisan group, intended to be the driving force behind Goh’s planned
bid for
the 2007 presidential election. Ironically, just before the May 31
elections, Uri
party elders had attempted to bring Goh into the party, but a sizable
number of
Uri party members rushed to join Goh’s new group.
A history of disunity
The Uri party was largely the creation of a factional row
inside the MDP when Roh, after his surprise election victory in 2002 as
a
liberal, refused to accommodate the conservative wing and resigned from
the MDP
on September 29, 2003.
Roh’s
supporters in the MDP formed the Uri Party, later officially recognized
by the
president as the new ruling party. The remnant MDP factions then joined
forces
with the opposition conservative GNP in a controversial move to impeach
the liberal
president in March 2004 on trumped-up charges of campaign illegality,
corruption and incompetence in dealing with economic affairs. The most serious charge was the alleged
violation
of the constitutional requirement of “political neutrality” on the part
of pubic
servants, including the head of state, committed by Roh when he openly
appealed
to the nation to support the Uri Party during a televised news
conference with
reporters on February 24, 2004.
The impeachment was passed by the Assembly on March 12 but overturned by South Korea's Constitutional Court on May 14, 2004.
Despite early successes in the polls, the Uri Party in its
short history has been plagued by disunity within its own ranks, going
through 14
party chairmen in the last three years. The last party chairman to
resign was
Chung who was the most charismatic and popular figure in the party, and
its
prime candidate for the December 2007 election. With the Uri Party
dissolved
and many of its members flocking to Goh’s new group, the lame duck
president is
left with very little support in the National Assembly. In Korean
politics, presidents
traditionally serve out their final year in office without introducing
new policy
initiatives. Both former presidents Kim Dae Jung and Kim Young Sam made
very
few policy changes in their final year. Reformers argue that a
lame-duck
administration in power for a whole year could negatively impact the
economy
and national interest in a time of rapid changes in the region and
around the
world.
Two mainstream faction leaders of the governing Uri Party on
December
27, 2006 voiced
their support for moves to dissolve the party and create a new
political group
to win back public confidence ahead of the December 2007 presidential
election.
In a meeting in Seoul, the party’s incumbent chairman, Kim Geun Tae,
and his
predecessor Chung Dong Young agreed to join forces to create a new
party that
unites all “pro-democracy reformists and future-oriented forces.’’
The agreement accelerated the breakup of
the Uri Party which
saw its approval rating hit a record low of less than 15%, making
George Bush’s
dismal 28% approval rating on January
22, 2007 look like a winner. Followers of President Roh
opposed the
move to create a new psrty. The latest opinion surveys showed Uri
presidential
hopefuls Kim and Chung lagging far behind probable candidates of the
main
opposition Grand National Party, (GNP), former Seoul Mayor Lee
Myung-bak and former
GNP Chairwoman Park Geun Hye, by up to 30 percentage points..
Hostility towards the North, artificially inflamed by US
Cold War manipulation, is a mismatch with deep-rooted Korean
nationalism, as highlighted
by the May 2002 North Korea visit of Ms Park Geun-hye, daughter of the
late
President Park Chung Hee.
The Park Geun-hye challenge
Less than two years after her dramatic visit to North
Korea, Ms. Park was elected on March 23, 2004 chairwoman of
the
conservative Grand National Party (GNP), the
conservative opposition to the liberal Roh government. Under her
leadership, the GNP won local elections
against the
ruling liberal Uri Party which had
increased spending on social services for the low-income and adopted conciliatory policies towards North Korea
while moving away from Cold War military alliances with the US and
Japan.
After the
controversial GNP bid to impeach President Roh, later overturned by South Korea’s Constitutional Court
on May 14, 2004, Ms. Park led her conservative GNP in the April 15, 2004 legislative
elections to
win 121 seats in the National Assembly, against the ruling liberal Uri
party
which won 152 seats from a total of
299 to maintain a slim majority. But four months later, on August 19,
the Uri
party suffered an embarrassing setback when party chairman Shin Ginam
had to resign
following revelations by a national investigation that his father had
worked
for the Japanese military police during Japanese occupation. The GNP
then swept
the nationwide local-level elections. During Ms. Kim’s tenure her
party’s
approval ratings rose to over 50%, despite of backlash from the
unpopular impeachment
call.
Ms. Park resigned her party post on June 16, 2006 in preparation
for a presidential
bid for the upcoming election slated for
December 2007.
Former Foreign Ministers Gong
Ro-myung and Hong Soon-young,
former deputy commander of the Korea-US Combined Forces Command
Kim Jae-chang and
former Korean Ambassador to Russia Lee
Jae-choon formed an adviser group for Park to advise her to put South
Korean
policy on North Korea on a focus on reciprocity rather than indulgence
while
restoring close relations with Washington and Tokyo.
On December
1, 2006, Ms. Park criticized President
Roh Moo-hyun for opposing the creation of a new bi-partisan political
party,
saying it was up to the people to decide. In her 2007 New Year message,
Park
attack President Park’s
liberal domestic policies and vowed to end the so-called “Korean
disease”, a
reference to Margaret Thatcher attack on the “British disease” of
frequent
labor strikes.
During a recent news conference in Qingdao,
China,
Ms. Park proposed linking Korea,
China
and Japan
by means of a train-ferry system across the sea equipped with rails on
deck to
accommodate train cars that would enable Korea
to take part in development projects deeper into China
and tap energy resources in Central Asia. She
said that
such a regional project would be possible only with political
cooperation between
North and South Korea,
China
and Japan.
On November 2, 2006,
Park said that regardless of personal political consequences, she would
work to resolve the North Korean nuclear issue,
hinting at a second
visit to North
Korea. Her first visit to Pyongyang was
in 2002, when she met with North Korean leader Kim Jong-il. She said
then that
although her mother was assassinated by a North Korean agent, she
decided to
meet Kim to help bring peace on the Korean Peninsula. It was a symbolic posture of a new South
relationship with the
North that blood is thicker than ideology.
From the beginning, Ms Park’s political path
was paved by personal
tragedy that gave her an aura of serene dignity. She lost her mother,
then South Korea's
first lady, to a North Korean
assassin in 1974. Five years later, her father, Park Chung Hee, the
nation's
longtime military ruler, was gunned down by his
CIA-installed-controlled intelligence
chief.
But as her political star begins to rise in South
Korea, now an unruly democracy, Park,
53,
has transformed herself from an object of national sympathy into a
statesperson
of great expectation. She took control of the GNP, consolidating the
nation’s
largest conservative opposition force, which had lost public support
through
corruption scandals and an unpopular attempt to impeach the liberal
President
Roh.
As an early contender for the December 2007 presidential
race that could make her South Korea's first female leader, Ms. Park
traveled
to Washington in mid-March 2005 on her first official visit to the US
as head
of the GNP, the opposition to the liberal Roh administration that rubs
the US
the wrong way. In three days of meetings with President Bush,
administration
officials and Congressional leaders, she called for strengthening
US-South
Korea ties which have been weakened in recent years as political
differences
over North Korea
divided Bush and Roh. Bush sought to isolate North
Korea as an evil state while Roh chose
engagement and reconciliation with a fraternal regime. South
Korea under Roh would not reverse its
policy
of active economic engagement with North
Korea
despite the North’s declaration that it has nuclear weapons. In
response, Park’s
GNP called for a parliamentary inquiry into Roh’s North
Korea policy. Yet the difference
between
Park and Roh is one of tactics rather than strategy.
In an interview designed to solicit US support before her
departure for Washington
in March
2005, Park said South Korea
needed to do more to force the North back to international talks aimed
at
dismantling its nuclear weapons program. South
Korea and China
have advocated a softer line with North
Korea,
while the United States
and Japan
have
pushed for a tougher stance. Yet even with US support, Park’s hurdles
toward
the presidency lie in South Korea,
where her father's legacy is being debated. Park Chung Hee, who came to
power
in a 1961 coup, is revered by conservatives as one that set South Korea
on the
path to prosperity with an industrial policy, but despised by liberals
as a
repressive violator of human rights. His efforts toward unification
with the
North, vetoed by the US,
which cost him his life, were generally admired by all South Koreans.
Scandals and Past
Skeletons
Members of the governing Uri Party of liberal
political ideology, including
several of Roh’s top aides who were arrested during Park Chung Hee’s
era, have
moved to create a truth commission that is compiling a list of South
Koreans
who collaborated with the pre-World War II Japanese government during
its long
occupation of the Korean Peninsula. GNP officials view the commission
as an
attempt to sully the image of Park Chung Hee, who served as a soldier
in the
Japanese army during the occupation. A public disgrace of Park could
kill the
political ambitions of his powerful daughter. Ironically, the
investigation led
to the embarrassing revelation of the sordid past of the late father of
Uri Party chairman Shin Ginam.
Ms. Park’s political foes are also moving to list those who
illegally benefited under her late father’s dictatorial reign. Park
concedes
that “Korean history needs to be reexamined”, acknowledging past human
rights
excesses. But she insisted such a review should be conducted by
politically neutral
parties and viewed in the context of the Cold War. In addition, she
said, there
should be an investigation of people who “committed pro-North acts
under the
guise of the pro-democracy movement” during her late father’s rule.
Park may
have difficulty connecting with younger South Koreans who, having no
direct
experience with the Korean War era, tend to be more anti-US and often
view her late
father and her party as relics of the repressive past encouraged by US
occupation authority. In defense, Ms.
Park said: “The past is the past. I'm
looking toward the future.” As in many other parts of the world, pro-US
positions are becoming domestic political liabilities in South
Korea.
Oppositon to US
Policy on North Korea
Both the ruling Uri Party and the opposition GNP do not
support US policy on North Korea, with the difference that the Uri
Party is
more antagonistic towards the US. Just as it took a life-long
anti-communist
Nixon to open to communist China,
a political leader of Ms. Park’s conservative credentials may be needed
to break
the artificial but deeply imbedded separation of the two Koreas
imposed by the US
since the beginning of the Cold War.
Ms. Park has the advantage of unmatched name recognition,
personally untainted by corruption and scandals, and despite her
conservatism,
she has shown herself to be pragmatic and flexible on policy towards North
Korea, favoring reconciliation and
economic
co-operation with the North, in contrast to others in her party who
want a less
indulgent approach. Park’s solid conservative credentials may give her
credibility to open up cooperation with North
Korea. In 2002, she traveled to Pyongyang
to meet the North Korean leader Kim Jong-il. By all accounts they got
on well.
Both are the offspring of charismatic figures who built the two Koreas
in their own separate image: one a hard-driving economic powerhouse
built by
industrial policy and the other an unapologetic socialist state. Recent
conservative
successes in local elections will boost her chances of winning the
hotly
contended nomination as presidential candidate for the GNP. After two
successive defeats, the party is desperate for victory in the next
election in
December 2007. But she still faces formidable rivals inside the party.
Her
ability to effectuate unification of Korea
will be a major asset in her campaign.
Constitution
Revision for Two-term Presidency
The five presidential hopefuls for the December 2007
election are former Seoul Mayor Lee Myung-bak, Ms. Park Geun-hye,
former Prime
Minister Goh Kun, former GNP chairman Lee Hoi-chang , and former Gyeonggi
Province
governor Sohn Hak-kyu. With
an approval rating of over 40%, Lee Myung-bak is currently the
undisputed
front-runner.
By current law, President Roh cannot seek re-election. His
surprise proposal for a constitutional revision to allow future heads
of state
to seek a second term in office and reduce the term to four years from
its
current five, is widely seen as a gambit to turn the tide of the
presidential
race, as early opinion polls suggest candidates from the ruling Uri
Party have
little chance of winning in the December 2007 election. Indeed, the
ruling Uri
Party collapsed when up to 30 lawmakers quit the largest parliamentary
bloc.
Roh’s proposed constitution change immediately divides South Korean
politics
along ideological lines, providing the ruling party an issue to rally
its
support base again. Roh argued that a change in the presidential term
would
bring stability and consistency in state affairs, saying the current
single
five-year term makes its leader a lame duck for almost his entire final
year,
at the expense of national interest. The proposal, however, is unlikely
to pass
the 296-member parliament, as the main opposition conservative GNP has
vowed to
kill the measure even before it is formally presented. In South
Korea, a bill on a constitutional
amendment
must be endorsed by at least two-thirds of the members of the
parliament and
then pass a national referendum. The GNP has a block of 127 seats in
the
single-chamber legislature to the Uri Party’s 139 seats.
Still, President Roh is expected to host the second
inter-Korean summit in the months leading up to the presidential vote.
While North Korea
has significantly increased tensions
in Northeast Asia by conducting seven ballistic
missile
tests, including an abortive launch of the long-range Taepodong 2, and
a dud nuclear
test, the Bush administration described these tests only as provocative
but not
an immediate threat to US
security. With universal non-proliferation increasingly becoming a
broken dream,
the US has openly relied on a nuclear missile defense regime as
deterrence,
coupled with a nuclear fatalism of selective proliferation for trusted
allies,
such as India, Japan, Taiwan and Israel, pitting against a losing
non-proliferation battle against North Korea, Iran and a host of other
minor
states such as Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia,
Turkey and
Germany.
Sympathy for North
Korea
North Korea,
notwithstanding being labeled as evil, has never adopted suicidal
policies. Without
credible missile defense, for North
Korea
to attack the US,
which possesses tens of thousands of nukes and accurate and reliable
delivery
systems for counterstrikes, would be suicidal. In other words, North
Korea’s nuclear force logically is
designed
as only a defensive deterrence against first attacks from the US.
This defensive deterrence nevertheless upsets the US
because it enables North Korea
to be geopolitically defiant of US
hegemony without being blackmailed by the threat of a first strike from
the US.
Still, for the US,
reliance on deterrence against a North Korean fist strike is preferable
than
embracing reckless preemptive strikes on North
Korea, which would unleash
uncontrollable
geopolitical consequences. Deterrence is also more preferable to
escalating the
nuclear crisis by adopting Japan’s
suggestion of imposing comprehensive international economic sanctions. Tokyo
and Washington seem to
have
forgotten that US
embargo of oil in 1940 pushed Japan
to attack Pearl Harbor.
The division of the Korean nation into two states of
opposing ideology and economic systems was the result of US
attempt to lure the USSR
into WWII against Japan.
After the war, it became part of the US
policy of containment of global communism. More than 15 years after the
fall of
the USSR
in
1991 and the end of Cold War paranoia of communism as a threat to
liberal
democracy, the antagonism between the two Koreas
is a dysfunctional anachronism devoid of an operative cause. Korea
has remained an unstable and dangerous flashpoint for no geopolitical
purpose. In a similar manner, the gulf
between China
and a US-protected Taiwan
is also an outdated geopolitical anachronism that prevents a normal
US-China
relation from developing.
Not withstanding US
fixation of promoting democracy around the world, democracy on every
continent is
producing governments that are critical if not outright hostile to US
policies.
Facing endless quagmire in Iraq,
rising Iranian influence and the destabilizing Israeli-Palestinian
conflict,
the US
has
decided that stability, not democracy, is its priority in the Middle
East and the Persian Gulf, a shift
made
clear by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in her January 15, 2007 meeting with Egyptian
leaders. It is a sobering
shift from the delusional missionary policy of “Transformation
Diplomacy” to spread
democracy around the world promoted by her since the beginning of the
Bush
administration over six years ago.
US
confrontational posture with North Korea
leaves Koreans in the South and many other people in Asia
and around the world exasperated. US
“transformation” policy in Asia has escalated North
Korea’s nuclear weapons program and
engendered growing anti-US sentiment in South
Korea and other parts of Asia.
Even within US political circles, a rising number of analysts are
questioning
whether Washington’s East
Asia security strategy serves US national interests, with US
forces spread thin by the Iraq
war and the war on terrorism and with the looming prospect of US
troops stationed in South Korea
becoming nuclear hostages.
Relations with US
under review
South Korean relationships with the US
have come under reviewed in South Korea
as Korean domestic politics evolves with changes in global and regional
geopolitical conditions. Controversy surrounds US
handover of wartime military control of South
Korea to Seoul.
A group of 77 retired South Korean generals urged the Roh
administration not to
try to retrieve wartime operational control over its troops from the US
during its tenure which ends in January 2008. Seo Joo-seok, senior
presidential
secretary for national security, said the South Korean government has a
flexible attitude over when the wartime control should be transferred.
The
retired generals demanded in a public statement that the next president
be
allowed to decide the issue. They urged Roh not to discuss the
timetable for
the transfer during his summit with US President George W. Bush on September 14, 2006 in Washington,
a month ahead of the Security Consultative Meeting (SCM) annual talks
between
defense ministers of the two countries.
In a letter to South Korean Defense Minister Yoon Kwang-ung,
then US
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld once again emphasized Washington’s
wish to transfer operational control over South Korean troops to Seoul
by 2009, three years earlier than South
Korea’s
initial deadline set for 2012. Rumdfeld,
pressed
for funds for the disastrous occupation of Iraq,
called for South
Korea to assume
an “equitable amount”
of defense costs. Many South Koreans interpreted it as a call for “a
50-50
split,” stirring controversy over the increasing financial burden on
South
Korean taxpayers. The looming burden of high defense expenditure
provides an urgent incentive for South
Korea
to reduce tension with North Korea
and to accelerate long-delayed unification.
On August 17, 2006, a month before his US visit, South Korea
President Roh told a press conference that he was frustrated over the
deadlocked
relationship between the US and North Korea. Looking ahead to the
upcoming summit,
Roh told reporters that he felt it almost impossible to convince
President Bush
to mend fences with North Korea.
Closer Ties to China
Li Dunqiu, director of the Korean
Peninsula Research
Center of
the State Council of the
People’s Republic of China,
argues that South Korea
would naturally move strategically closer to China
because “Korea’s
future lies with China,
not with the US.”
Many South Korean leaders agree with that argument in principle. They see China
and Korea
sharing
common interests that transcend current US-South Korea alliance of Cold
War
origin. Many political leaders in Asia see US
insistence on perpetuating its post-WWII hegemony in Asia
as a destabilizing factor that threatens prosperity and development in
the
region for the simple reason that the US
is a non-Asian power external to the region that does not share
cultural
affinity or economic symbiosis with most of the region’s member states.
All
over Asia, and particularly in Korea
and in the Taiwan Straits, the US
works to maintain an unnatural status quo of superpower hegemony left
by the
Cold War in the name of promoting democracy against communism. Yet
democratic
processes around the world have repeatedly resulted in increasingly
anti-US, left-leaning
governments that oppose the neo-liberal policies promoted by the US.
The US
is the
main obstacle in the reunification of Korea
and the main obstacle in China’s
recovery of Taiwan.
China,
on the
other hand, wants the two Koreas
to improve relations toward reunification because China
believes a unified Korea
would greatly reduce regional tension and strengthen stability to allow
further
economic development.
To reduce military expenses associated with US
hegemony, the US
is working to rearm Japan
and strengthening India’s
nuclear capability in order to launch a nuclear and conventional arms
race in Asia.
Applying Cold War strategy on the former USSR, the US aims to bankrupt
Asia,
particular China, with an all out arms race among major Asian powers to
eliminate rising rivals of the US without a shooting war.
Despite the North Korean nuclear crisis and internecine ideological
conflicts among domestic political parties, the state of the South
Korean
economy and its long-delayed economic recovery are issues foremost on
the minds
of the electorate. Despite President Roh’s repeated promises on
restructuring the
economy to re-energize growth, he is perceived as having squandered his
political capital on peripheral issues, such as relocating the national
capital
from Seoul to a new $40 billion capital in the sleepy region of
Gongju-Yongi,
160 km south of Seoul by 2020; rescinding the National Security Law and
probing
into past dirt that are better left alone. Economic growth for first
quarter in
2005 fell to 3%, below 2004 growth and far below Roh’s promises of 7%,
raising
public and investor concern. The government front-loaded public sector
spending
in the beginning of 2005 in an attempt to jump-start the economy.
Although 2005
growth rate reached 5.7%, growth in 2006 slowed back to 5%. Analysts
expect
2007 to face a growth rate of below 5%. While it is obvious that
economic
growth in South Korea
is dependent on closer economic relations with China,
a recent report revealed that South
Korea
was forced to ditch a trade deal with China
under US
pressure. South Korea is currently pursuing a Free Trade Agreement with
the US
even though the experience with Free Trade Agreements between the US
and other
countries has not lived up to its promise for the weaker economy.
Roh emerged from his 2004 impeachment with a legislative
majority, a severely weakened opposition, and a new popular mandate
that
provided a honeymoon period in which the electorate was generally
supportive of
his progressive policies. Yet he was unable to press his advantage to
push
reform legislation through the conservative-dominated National
Assembly. Roh’s
inaction dissipated public support and revived criticism of his
policies and
leadership. Acrimony within the National Assembly resumed, impairing
the legislature’s
ability to reach consensus on domestic reform bills. The resounding
defeat
suffered by the ruling Uri Party in the April 2005 by-elections
reflected an
electorate that remained frustrated over Roh’s failure to achieve
progress on
domestic economic issues. The main opposition GNP was emboldened to
step up
criticism of the president’s liberal domestic policies, his mishandling
of
relations with the US
and his soft approach to North Korea.
Characterizing the legislative stalemate as an “emergency
situation”, Roh was forced to accept the need for a coalition
government, but
elements of both likely coalition partners, the Democratic Labor Party
and the
Millennium Democratic Party, remained in opposition.
Yet the conservative opposition GNP has been unable to
capitalize on Roh’s political weakness. Public support for the GNP in
the April
2005 by-elections came as a negative reaction to Roh’s failures rather
than a
shift in support for conservative GNP policies. The GNP itself has been
beset
with bitter infighting between younger, reform-minded members and
older,
traditional conservatives. GNP Chairwoman Park Geun-hye was unable to
bridge
this generational gap, and the party remains divided, with the
moderates
gaining support from the “New Right” movement, a collection of
conservative-minded Koreans who are critical of the old-style politics
of the
GNP. Since the elections, support for the GNP has fallen steadily with
persistent rumors of a break-up of the party following the same fate of
the
ruling Uri Party. All in all, South Korean domestic politics is
experiencing
new dynamics driven by evolving global and regional geo-politics.
The collapse of the ruling Uri Party did not translate into
support for any of the opposition parties. Current polls show public
support to
be declining for all political parties and evenly split among the three
main
parties. Roh’s dwindling political influence and lame duck status will
impede further
implementation of necessary political and fiscal reforms, undermine
confidence in
South Korea’s
economic future, and hinder progress on resolving the North
Korea crisis. The Deputy Premier for
Finance
and Economy recently warned that the South Korean economy “may fall
into a
long-term recession like that of Japan.”
Full participation in and integration with the vast, rapidly growing
economy of
China
is an
opportunity that South
cannot afford to miss.
Public discontent with the effect of globalization on South
Korea’s protracted economic stagnation
gave Roh
a popular mandate to pursue increasingly nationalist and China-leaning
policies.
Anti-US sentiments were augmented by anti-Japan protests that echo
Chinese
complaints.
Relations with Japan
Strong public support was given to Roh’s vocal rhetoric
against Japan
in response to the dispute over the Dokdo Islets, two tiny rocky islets
surrounded by 33 smaller rocks located 215 kilometers off the eastern
border of
Korea
and 90
kilometers east of South Korea's
Ullung Island. South Korea designated Dokdo 'Natural Monument No. 336' in
1982, a
territory that was first incorporated into the Korean Silla Dynasty in
512 A.D. Japan asserts that it had incorporated Dokdo, as a terra
nullius, into the Japanese Empire on February 22, 1905 when the Governor of Shimane prefecture
proclaimed the
islets to be under the jurisdiction of the Oki Islands branch office of the Shimane prefecture
government under
the name “Takeshima”, cited in Shimane prefecture proclamation number
40 of
that year.
The Dkodo islets dispute has its parallel in the
Sino-Japanese territorial dispute over the Diaoyutai/Senakaku Islands.
The
island group - Diaoyutai in Chinese and Senkaku in Japanese - is
composed of
eight small, uninhabited islands, sitting roughly 100 miles northeast
of Taiwan
and 250 miles west of Okinawa. The jurisdiction
over
uninhabited islets can mean the expansion of a nation's exclusive
economic zone
(EEZ), and can bring extra resources, marine, mineral or petroleum, to
enrich a
nation’s national assets. In the case of the Diaoyutai/Senakaku Islands
about
40,000 square kilometers of oil/gas rich EEZ is at stake.
The Japanese textbook issue concerning a revision of Japan
role and atrocity in WWII is greeted with strong public protests and
diplomatic
complaints in South Korea,
as it does in China.
Sharing a common feeling with the Chinese, all Koreans are incensed by
such
revisions in recent Japanese militaristic and atrocious history.
The annual visits by Japanese leaders to Yasukuni Shrine, dedicated
to the spirit of those who died fighting on behalf of Japanese
imperialism,
have caused tension in Japan’s relation with its Asian neighbors nearly
every
year since 1975, when Prime Minister Miki Takeo first visited the
shrine as a
private individual on August 15, on the 30th anniversary of
the day
that Japan commemorates the end of WWII. The following year, his
successor
Fukufa Takeo visited as a private individual yet signed the visitors’
book as
prime minister. Several other Japanese prime ministers visited the
shrine since
1979: Massayoshi Ohira in 1979; Zenko Suzuki in 1980, 1981 and 1982;
Yasuhiro
Nakasone in 1983 and 1985; Kiichi Miyazawa in 1992; Ryutaro Hashimoto
in 1996
and Junichiro Koizumi, Japan’s 89th prime minister, visited
annually
six times from 2001 to 2006. These visits solicited official
condemnation from
neighboring Asian countries since 1985 as an attempt to legitimize and
revitalize Japanese militarism. China
has identified Koizumi by name as the obstacle to improving
Sino-Japanese
relations.
On October 17, 1978,
14 convicted Class-A war criminals were quietly enshrined as
"Martyrs of Showa” as well as about 1,000 others convicted for war
crimes
during WWII. Prime Minister Koizuma last visited the shrine on 15 August 2006 which is also
the day Korea
commemorates its liberation from Japanese imperialist occupation.
Japanese
annexation of Korea
and war crimes during that period is the heat source behind persistent
anti-Japan sentiments in Korea.
Koizumi, George Bush’s favorite ally, valued alliance with
the US
over
close ties with its Asian neighbors, arguing that a strong tie to the US
strengthens Japan’s
hand in dealing with China
and South Korea.
Koizumi’s foreign policy, divisive at home, led to the suspension of
summit
meetings with both China
and South Korea
during his premiership and put Japan’s
Asian diplomacy in an untenable position. Opinion polls showed many
Japanese
opposed to Koizumi’s annual visits to the war shrine, calling on the
next prime
minister to mend ties with Japan’s
Asian neighbors.
Makoto Iokibe, president of the National Defense Academy of
Japan, wrote in an article that Koizumi’s shrine visits not only led to
the
worsening of Japan’s
foreign relations, but also damaged Japan’s
state “credit,” the precious “foreign policy assets.”
Former Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone said in an August 14, 2006 interview
by The Nihon Keizai Shimbun; “Asian policy is something
that Japan
should act independently [from the US]
to some extent. In Koizumi's case, there's been a belief that as long
as ties
with the US
are
good, everything else will take care of itself. But I think we should
create a
situation where the US
gains greater understanding of China
through Japan.
A
big task for the next premier is to improve relations with China
and South Korea
-- which have been unnecessarily strained by Junichiro Koizumi’s visits
to
Yasukuni Shrine -- so that the three nations can hold regular summit
meetings
as soon as possible.”
During their visits to Tokyo
in May, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and Singaporean Minister Mentor
Lee
Kuan Yew both criticized Koizumi’s shrine visits, saying the visits had
led to
the escalating tension in the region.
On his first visit to Japan
since leaving office in February 2003, former South
Korea President Kim Dae Jung openly
criticized
visits by Japanese politicians to Yasukuni Shrine, and proposed that
the 14
Class-A war criminals be moved to a different location. He said, “If
that
option is realized, I will not express opposition to visits to Yasukuni
Shrine
[by Koizumi or other Japanese leaders.]” Kim
noted that Koizumi promised him at a
meeting in Shanghai in
2001 to
consider building a new secular memorial facility that could replace
Yasukuni
Shrine and enable anyone to worship there without hesitation.
China
has also been a vocal critic of the shrine visits. The issue of
Yasukuni Shrine
is just as heavily tied to China’s
internal politics as it is to the historical conduct of Japan's
military and its perceived remorse for its actions. Similarly, large
segments
of Roh’s political base in South Korea
support strong anti-Japanese policy which is linked to anti-US rhetoric
and
policy on account of the US-Japanese alliance.
One step forward, one step back
Pyongyang’s
behavior,
which is dictated by North Korean domestic politics, will affect South
Korean
public perceptions of Roh’s engagement policy. North
Korea’s agreement to a Joint Statement
of
principles on September 19,
2006
offered a respite to Roh’s declining popularity. In the Joint
Statement, North Korea
“committed to abandoning all nuclear
weapons and existing nuclear programs and returning at an early date to
the
treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons (NPT) and to IAEA
(International Atomic Energy Agency) safeguards.”
In the same Joint Statement, the US
affirmed that “it has no nuclear weapons on the Korean
Peninsula
and has no intention to
attack or invade the DPRK with nuclear or conventional weapons.” South
Korea reaffirmed “its commitment not
to
receive or deploy nuclear weapons in accordance with the 1992 Joint
Declaration
of the Denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula,
while affirming that
there exist no nuclear weapons within its territory.” All sides agree
that “the
1992 Joint Declaration of the Denuclearization of the Korean
Peninsula
should be observed and
implemented.”
It seemed that the nuclear crisis was resolved by the
September 19 Joint Statement. But in response to US
provocation of freezing North Korean bank assets over alleged
counterfeiting of
dollars, an issue unrelated to nuclear proliferation, Pyongyang
followed up with a provocative statement within 24 hours. There seemed
to be a
conflict between the US Treasury and the State Department on the
nation’s
approach to North Korea.
Although the provocative North Korean statements reflected Pyongyang’s
efforts to further define the terms of the vaguely worded statement
rather than
a categorical repudiation of negotiations, they dampened initial
euphoria in South Korea
and underscored that the thorny issues
cannot be resolved with US
intransigence.
South Korea’s
legislature and the general public also began to have second thoughts
about the
rising cost of Seoul’s
engagement
policy. South Korea’s
proposal to provide two million kilowatts of electricity to the North
would
cost $11 billion through 2018 and was predicated on being in lieu of Seoul’s
obligation to 70% of the cost of the $4.5 billion Light Water Reactor
project.
Despite $3.5 billion in South Korean aid during the past decade, Seoul
has achieved little improvement in North Korean behavior due to US
intransigence, resulting in rising anti-US sentiments in South
Korea.
Roh has little remaining time to accomplish his policy objectives
as his influence decreases exponentially towards the end of his term.
It is
increasingly apparent that as a lame duck leader, Roh is unable to
provide
effective leadership for the nation at a time of critical domestic and
international challenges.
A Joint Statement by the leaders of China, Japan and South
Korea released on January 14, 2007 at Cebu, the Philippines, expressed
concern
about North Korea’s missile launches and nuclear test and reaffirmed
the need
for full implementation of the UNSC Resolution 1695 and 1718 by all UN
Member
State, as well as their commitment to the peaceful resolution of the
nuclear
issue of the Korea Peninsula through dialogue and negotiation, the full
implementation of the September 19 Joint Statement, the
denuclearization of the
Peninsula and satisfying humanitarian concerns. Yet the revival of
Japanese
militarism adds legitimacy to North
Korea’s
push for nuclear weapons on top of continuing US
hostility.
Beside security concerns, there is powerful rationale
pushing for closer economic integration among the three neighboring
nations via
progressive government regulations. The leaders also called for
cooperation in informationization in the region. China,
Japan
and South Korea
have started active exchange and
cooperation in the areas of Linux, IPV6 technology and its
standardization and
4G mobile communications that do not include US markets which are
increasingly
saddled with characteristics of underdevelopment through its fixation
on market
fundamentalism.
Next: Japanese Strategy for a “Beautiful Nation”
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