DEFUSING ANTI-AMERICAN RHETORIC

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "DEFUSING ANTI-AMERICAN RHETORIC"

Transcription

1 DEFUSING ANTI-AMERICAN RHETORIC IN SOUTH KOREA BALBINA Y. HWANG After a contentious campaign that seemed to focus more on nationalist sentiments than on pressing domestic and security issues, South Koreans elected a new president, Roh Moo Hyun, on December 19. Since then, North Korea has garnered the spotlight with the resumption of its nuclear weapons programs. As the United States addresses these developments, it must recognize that the anti-american sentiment in the Republic of Korea (ROK) and the provocative actions of North Korea are related. The solution to both these problems lies in a strong, proactive leadership on both sides of the Pacific. On the U.S. side, the Bush Administration should assure South Koreans that America fully shares their security interests and sincerely desires reconciliation on the Korean peninsula. It must also work to educate Koreans and the world community that North Korea, and not the United States, is responsible for North Korean threats and dangerous actions. Washington should continue to work with Seoul to formulate realistic policies that address South Korean concerns over the U.S. military presence without compromising its operational interests. And the Administration should ensure that its officials here and abroad appropriately address Korean concerns and sensitivities. On the South Korean side, Seoul should better articulate the seriousness of the North Korean threat to its people. To strengthen the sense of partnership in the U.S. ROK alliance, Seoul should also publicize the enduring Produced by the Asian Studies Center Published by The Heritage Foundation 214 Massachusetts Ave., NE Washington, DC (202) This paper, in its entirety, can be found at: research/asiaandthepacific/ bg1619.cfm importance of the alliance to both countries if peaceful reconciliation on the Korean peninsula is to be achieved. Much of the current ire against the United States concerns an accident last June, when a U.S. armored vehicle participating in military exercises struck two 14-year-old Korean girls as they walked along a narrow village road. A U.S. military court ruled that the deaths were accidental and acquitted the two U.S. servicemen driving the vehicle of homicide charges. This ruling prompted an eruption of demonstrations in South Korea and a protest vigil outside the White House in Washington. The protests have now expanded to include calls for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Korea altogether. The media in Korea and the United States regularly offer vivid images of protestors and anti-amer-

2 ican slogans, but it would be wrong to conclude from these images that the U.S. ROK alliance is in danger. While the current protests are a signal that there are differences of opinion in some sectors of South Korean society regarding the U.S. troop presence and Washington s polices toward North Korea, neither Washington nor Seoul should overreact in ways that would damage the long-standing U.S. ROK alliance. Although there have been increasing incidents of violence against Americans, few South Koreans even those participating in demonstrations at the U.S. Embassy compound in Seoul support movements that advocate harm to the United States or its citizens. Rather, the major source of anti-american sentiment is the growing chasm between U.S. and South Korean perceptions of the threat posed by North Korea. While Americans concern over the dangers presented by the North Korean regime have been heightened recently by Pyongyang s dangerous game of nuclear brinkmanship, South Koreans seem to fear that U.S. firmness in response to North Korea s policies increases the possibility of war on the peninsula. The differing threat perceptions between South Koreans and Americans paradoxically serve to further North Korean interests. If not quickly addressed by leaders in Seoul and Washington, the situation could jeopardize South Korea s security and America s interests in promoting peace and stability in Northeast Asia. BILATERAL DIFFERENCES Recent headlines both in South Korea and in the United States portray a rising tide of anti-americanism that has raised concerns in Seoul and Washington, but anti-american protests in South Korea are not new. Indeed, during the half-century of the formal relationship between the United States and the ROK, anti-american sentiments have flared up often. 1 Today, the increase in criticism of, and dissatisfaction with, U.S. policies is rooted in the growing differences between Americans and South Koreans over their perceptions of North Korea. South Koreans view the threat from North Korea as immediate and local. The United States sees North Korea as a regional and global threat that requires a concerted effort to end the North s production and proliferation of ballistic missiles and terminate its nuclear weapons program. From the U.S. perspective, the North Korean threat is based on (1) Pyongyang s insistence on a military first policy, despite mass starvation of its people; (2) its illicit pursuit of nuclear weapons, including its flagrant violation of four international and bilateral agreements; (3) its proliferation of arms and missiles; (4) its record of state-sponsored terrorism, including the kidnapping of Japanese and other foreign citizens; (5) its continued hostile military stance toward the South; (6) its continued brutality toward its own people through widespread violation of human rights; (7) its involvement in the international drug trade and counterfeiting; and (8) its provocation of South Korea and Japan by spy boats and intelligence agents. South Koreans today view North Korea differently. Despite the North s clinging to communist tenets, most South Koreans think the Cold War is over. No longer are South Koreans faced with the invincible Kim Il Sung of the past, whose threatening actions and rhetoric often resoundingly justified South Korea s security-first mentality. South Koreans today see in Kim Jong Il a leader who smiles, makes agreements and promises, and seems to be pursuing reforms in North Korea. Moreover, South Korean citizens seem to be satisfied with Kim Jong Il s promises, even though he has consistently either broken them or failed to fulfill them. South Koreans now feel a connection to what they see as poor, starving, and weak brethren in North Korea. They are eager to grasp this as the new reality on the peninsula an unforeseen legacy of the June 2000 summit in Pyongyang that was part of President Kim Dae Jung s Sunshine Policy 1. Anti-Americanism is not a new phenomenon in the formal 50-year history of U.S. ROK relations. For example, shortly after arriving in Seoul in 1945 to take charge of the southern half of the Korean peninsula, General John Hodge, commander of the U.S. military occupation in Korea, sent a cable to his superiors in Washington that noted: The United States is being blamed for the partition of Korea, and there is a growing resentment against all Americans. [T]he label pro-american is quickly becoming an epithet. In 1987, the U.S. ambassador to the ROK, Richard L. Walker, penned an urgent 10-page memorandum to his successor, Ambassador James Lilley, to warn him of a dangerous rise in anti-american sentiment. NOTE: Nothing written here is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of The Heritage Foundation or as an attempt to aid or hinder the passage of any bill before Congress.

3 effort. But North Korea remains a local and immediate threat to South Korea. Some South Koreans view the United States as an obstacle to reconciliation and reunification. They blame President George W. Bush s principled stance against the North for slow progress in inter-korean rapprochement and the break in dialogue with Pyongyang. This perception was exacerbated when President Bush named North Korea as part of the axis of evil in his State of the Union address in January It is clear from North Korean actions since late 2000 that Pyongyang, not Washington, is responsible for the break in dialogue with the South. Nevertheless, some South Koreans and the international media overlook such realities and instead blame Washington for the breakdown in talks, which contributes to anti-american sentiments. Negative South Korean views of U.S. policies were further strengthened by the U.S. response to the North s disclosure of an illicit nuclear program. South Koreans regard the decision by the Korean Energy Development Organization (KEDO) to suspend fuel aid to the North in order to pressure it to end its nuclear programs as part of an American scheme to keep the peninsula tense and divided. This is an incorrect assessment of America s intentions and actions. Since the recent tensions caused by the nuclear program, President Bush has made clear that Washington wants to find a peaceful, diplomatic, nonmilitary resolution. The United States is rightly standing firm in its refusal to enter into negotiations with North Korea until Pyongyang ceases its nuclear programs. It is more accurate to characterize the Administration s stance prior to the North s nuclear revelation as cautious and skeptical but open to engagement. The Administration s skepticism about South Korea s Sunshine Policy is, in the end, not very different from the South Korean public s own discontent over the shortcomings of this policy. SOURCES OF ANTI-AMERICAN SENTIMENT Changes in South Korean perceptions of the North Korean threat are due in part to the desire to reap a peace dividend from the end of the Cold War. South Koreans also are psychologically tired of considering their brethren an enemy, even though North Korea maintains military forces along the border with the South. It is even more problematic for South Koreans to accept that a regime so desperate that it allowed millions of its own citizens to starve to death is a meaningful and menacing threat to a country that is at least 50 times stronger economically. Over the past two decades, South Korea has undergone profound political, economic, and social transformation. Politically, it is now one of the most vibrant and thriving democracies in East Asia. Economically, it has become a regional if not global powerhouse. Socially, it has embraced globalization, perhaps more thoroughly than any other Asian society. Thus, South Korea is adjusting to the immense challenges that accompany such changes, including how to reconcile national pride and achievements with lingering feelings of inadequacy and dependency stemming from a long and bitter Japanese colonial legacy. The newfound freedom of South Koreans to express their opinions and their ability to pursue activities beyond mere economic survival also help to explain the recent growth of anti-american sentiments. Even those who have weak political motivation can now participate in the political process, particularly due to the wide availability and popularity of the Internet. The ability of people to express their opposition to U.S. policies widely and graphically over the Internet has contributed to the perceived rise in anti-american sentiment. Other observers attribute the increase in resentment against the U.S. military presence to the fading of Korean War memories, given that over 60 percent of the Korean population was born after the war. Yet this argument carries less weight when one considers that it is this younger generation, born in the post-war period, who also exhibit stronger anti- Japanese sentiment than their elders even though they are even farther removed from the Japanese colonial period. Therefore, it is likely that the increase in resentment toward the United States has more to do with the South s greatly diminished perception of the threat emanating from the North, increased national pride, and the end of the Cold War. Whereas the older generations tend to view the U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) as a necessary part of the national security landscape, surveys show that 3

4 these tendencies tend to subside among those aged 40 years and younger, as well as among intellectuals. 2 The implications for U.S. policy are significant. If the United States perceives that South Korea is increasingly anti-american and no longer welcomes the U.S. military presence, then it may reconsider its forward troop presence and perhaps even reassess the entire alliance. This is even more likely if the American people and Congress, who may fail to appreciate the nuances of South Korean domestic politics, begin to share that perception. THE ADMINISTRATION S NEXT STEPS Considering North Korean actions and South Korean sentiments, the Bush Administration must take immediate and direct action to shore up the crucial U.S. ROK alliance. This means making efforts to convey a sense of commitment and priority with respect to issues of concern to the South Korean people. Specifically, the Administration should take immediate steps to: 1. Ensure that South Koreans understand the security interests shared by Seoul and Washington, particularly the nuclear threat posed by North Korea. While the Administration should not interfere in the South s domestic political process, it should work to build support across the political spectrum for continuing the U.S. military presence in South Korea. The Administration, the U.S. Ambassador to Seoul, and key leaders of the U.S. military forces in the South must take measured and coordinated steps to continually market the rationale behind the U.S. presence. They should endeavor to do this alongside their South Korean partners. Successful U.S. policies require the endorsement of the majority of South Koreans as well as of the government. Leaders of the country s major political parties should be encouraged to refrain from making the U.S. ROK alliance a political issue. 2. Continue to work with Seoul to formulate realistic and prudent policies that address Korean concerns regarding the U.S. military presence. In the long term, for example, the Administration should continue to reduce the American footprint on the peninsula while improving military training opportunities and combat power. These can be modeled after the highly successful Land-Partnership Program achieved in In the short term, the Pentagon should consider the implementation of policies that would immediately reduce the chances of future training accidents. The U.S. armed forces, for example, should refrain wherever possible from conducting exercises in training areas that are located within populated civilian areas. When military personnel must be mobilized and moved through these areas, this should be done under escort, perhaps by South Korean police, in a non-tactical manner or by administrative convoys. The U.S. military should provide and ensure escorts for the convoys and ensure that South Korean and U.S. military police monitor all roads and other travel routes to protect the civilian population. 3. Launch an aggressive media and public relations campaign to educate both South Koreans and Americans on the facts of the SOFA (Status of Forces Agreement) and other specific aspects of the U.S. ROK bilateral treaty. Both South Koreans and Americans suffer from a lack of knowledge about the contributions by both sides to the alliance and the U.S. force presence. Incorrect or false information contributes to the negative emotions on both sides and feeds a mutual sense of lack of appreciation. For example, many Americans assume that the United States government pays for the full cost of stationing and maintaining 37,000 U.S. troops in Korea. In reality, the ROK government contributes almost 50 percent of non-personnel stationing costs for U.S. forces in South Korea. On the South Korean side, the military accident in June precipitated calls for a revision of the SOFA. These calls are grounded in a mistaken 2. Seo Soo-Min, Activists Intensify SOFA Revision Efforts, The Korea Times, August 6,

5 belief that the agreement s allegedly unfair terms allowed the U.S. military to avert all responsibility. In reality, the terms of the bilaterally negotiated SOFA benefit both sides by respecting the legal systems of both countries. For example, most South Koreans believe that the U.S. Forces Korea has jurisdiction over every SOFA-status person who commits a crime in South Korea. This is untrue. In 2001, 82 percent of all crimes committed by USFK personnel in South Korea were subject to South Korean jurisdiction. This high percentage confirms U.S. respect for South Korean sovereignty and judicial processes. 3 Many South Koreans also believe that the supposedly unfair terms of the SOFA arrangement allowed the USFK exclusive jurisdiction over the investigation and trial of U.S. military personnel involved in the accident in June. In reality, however, even South Korean soldiers are never tried by civilian courts. Thus, for example, if the driver or track commander of the June incident had been a South Korean soldier, he would have been tried by the Korean military court-martial, not the civilian criminal courts. The fact is that in ROK government agreements with other countries where a South Korean military force may be present, the ROK military maintains exclusive jurisdiction over its personnel. This is an advantage that the U.S. does not even enjoy in its SOFA with South Korea. 4. Encourage U.S. officials be more sensitive to the emotionalism and volatility of public sentiments in Korea. The United States should avoid making seemingly minor but in reality costly errors, such as delaying its sincere and public expression of regret over tragedies like the schoolgirl deaths in June. CONCLUSION The politicization of anti-american sentiments in South Korea has caused undue distraction from the close cooperation and coordination that is required to address the North Korean threat. Neither the United States nor South Korea should overreact to the emotionalism that is overshadowing other pressing non-security issues, including the downturn in the global economy and a possible consumer credit bubble in South Korea s economy. Although the intensity of the anti-american protests may be disconcerting, they should not be seen as a signal that the alliance should be terminated. South Koreans are expressing their frustration over specific events and what they perceive to be divergent U.S. and South Korean national interests. Conflicts will inevitably arise as the U.S. ROK relationship adjusts to the domestic and international political realities in the post September 11 security environment. If the mutually beneficial alliance relationship is to be sustained, both sides must improve their understanding of the security threats and the origins of anti-american sentiments in South Korea. And they must take steps to address those sentiments in the near term in order to ensure the future vitality of the alliance. This year marks the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Mutual Security Treaty. Both countries should use this important milestone both to honor their relationship as one of the most successful bilateral alliances in their respective histories and to ensure that their citizens understand its importance and the need for it to continue. Balbina Y. Hwang is Policy Analyst for Northeast Asia in the Asian Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation. 3. The South Korean judicial system has the right to exercise its jurisdiction in all but two narrow types of offenses perpetrated by SOFA personnel: (1) offenses against the property or security of the United States or against another SOFA-status victim and (2) offenses committed by SOFA-status personnel during the performance of official duty. It is clear that the accident involving the U.S. military armored vehicle in June clearly falls under the jurisdiction of this second qualification. T. D. Flack, South Korean Leader Orders His Cabinet to Improve SOFA Agreement, Stars and Stripes, December 5,

Spotlight on the North Korean Human Rights Act: Correcting Misperceptions

Spotlight on the North Korean Human Rights Act: Correcting Misperceptions Spotlight on the North Korean Human Rights Act: Correcting Misperceptions Balbina Y. Hwang In October, both houses of Congress unanimously passed and President George W. Bush signed the North Korean Human

More information

Conflict on the Korean Peninsula: North Korea and the Nuclear Threat Student Readings. North Korean soldiers look south across the DMZ.

Conflict on the Korean Peninsula: North Korea and the Nuclear Threat Student Readings. North Korean soldiers look south across the DMZ. 8 By Edward N. Johnson, U.S. Army. North Korean soldiers look south across the DMZ. South Korea s President Kim Dae Jung for his policies. In 2000 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. But critics argued

More information

U.S. RELATIONS WITH THE KOREAN PENINSULA: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A NEW ADMINISTRATION

U.S. RELATIONS WITH THE KOREAN PENINSULA: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A NEW ADMINISTRATION U.S. RELATIONS WITH THE KOREAN PENINSULA 219 U.S. RELATIONS WITH THE KOREAN PENINSULA: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR A NEW ADMINISTRATION Scott Snyder Issue: In the absence of a dramatic breakthrough in the Six-Party

More information

[SE4-GB-3] The Six Party Talks as a Viable Mechanism for Denuclearization

[SE4-GB-3] The Six Party Talks as a Viable Mechanism for Denuclearization [SE4-GB-3] The Six Party Talks as a Viable Mechanism for Denuclearization Hayoun Jessie Ryou The George Washington University Full Summary The panelists basically agree on the point that the Six Party

More information

Changing South Korean Public Opinion on the US and the ROK- US Alliance. Nae-Young Lee

Changing South Korean Public Opinion on the US and the ROK- US Alliance. Nae-Young Lee Changing South Korean Public Opinion on the US and the ROK- US Alliance Nae-Young Lee (Dept. of Political Science, Korea University, nylee@korea.ac.kr) Paper prepared for a Workshop on America in Question:

More information

South Korean Response to the North Korean Nuclear Test

South Korean Response to the North Korean Nuclear Test Commentary South Korean Response to the North Korean Nuclear Test Raviprasad Narayanan This should be a moment of joy. But instead, I stand here with a very heavy heart. Despite the concerted warning from

More information

Briefing Memo. How Should We View the Lee Myung-bak Administration s Policies?

Briefing Memo. How Should We View the Lee Myung-bak Administration s Policies? Briefing Memo How Should We View the Lee Myung-bak Administration s Policies? TAKESADA Hideshi Executive Director for Research & International Affairs South Korea s new administration has been emphasizing

More information

Rush Lesson Plan: North Korea s Nuclear Threat. Purpose How should countries deal with North Korea s nuclear threat?

Rush Lesson Plan: North Korea s Nuclear Threat. Purpose How should countries deal with North Korea s nuclear threat? Rush Lesson Plan: North Korea s Nuclear Threat Purpose How should countries deal with North Korea s nuclear threat? Essential Questions: 1. What are some important events in North Korea s past? How might

More information

Hearing on the U.S. Rebalance to Asia

Hearing on the U.S. Rebalance to Asia March 30, 2016 Prepared statement by Sheila A. Smith Senior Fellow for Japan Studies, Council on Foreign Relations Before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission Hearing on the U.S. Rebalance

More information

Puzzling US Policy on North Korea

Puzzling US Policy on North Korea Puzzling US Policy on North Korea February 1, 2018 When will the president make a clear decision? By Jacob L. Shapiro On Jan. 29, 2002, U.S. President George W. Bush gave his second State of the Union

More information

The Korean Nuclear Problem Idealism verse Realism By Dr. C. Kenneth Quinones January 10, 2005

The Korean Nuclear Problem Idealism verse Realism By Dr. C. Kenneth Quinones January 10, 2005 The Korean Nuclear Problem Idealism verse Realism By Dr. C. Kenneth Quinones January 10, 2005 Perceptions of a problem often outline possible solutions. This is certainly applicable to the nuclear proliferation

More information

The Policy for Peace and Prosperity

The Policy for Peace and Prosperity www.unikorea.go.kr The Policy for Peace and Prosperity The Policy for Peace and Prosperity Copyright c2003 by Ministry of Unification Published in 2003 by Ministry of Unification Republic of Korea Tel.

More information

NORTH KOREA S NUCLEAR PROGRAM AND THE SIX PARTY TALKS

NORTH KOREA S NUCLEAR PROGRAM AND THE SIX PARTY TALKS 1 NORTH KOREA S NUCLEAR PROGRAM AND THE SIX PARTY TALKS GRADES: 10 th AUTHOR: Sarah Bremer TOPIC/THEME: World History, International Security, Nuclear Proliferation and Diplomacy TIME REQUIRED: One 80

More information

South Korean Public Opinion on North Korea & the Nations of the Six-Party Talks

South Korean Public Opinion on North Korea & the Nations of the Six-Party Talks South Korean Public Opinion on North Korea & the Nations of the Six-Party Talks October 2011 Jiyoon Kim Karl Friedhoff South Korean Public Opinion on North Korea & the Nations of the Six-Party Talks Jiyoon

More information

AsiaPacific. Changing Korean Perceptions of the Post Cold War Era and the U.S. ROK Alliance

AsiaPacific. Changing Korean Perceptions of the Post Cold War Era and the U.S. ROK Alliance Changing Korean Perceptions of the Post Cold War Era and the U.S. ROK Alliance CHOONG NAM KIM AsiaPacific I S S U E S No. 67 April 2003 The U.S. Congress established the East-West Center in 1960 to foster

More information

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA Eric Her INTRODUCTION There is an ongoing debate among American scholars and politicians on the United States foreign policy and its changing role in East Asia. This

More information

NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR NEGOTIATIONS: STRATEGIES AND PROSPECTS FOR SUCCESS

NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR NEGOTIATIONS: STRATEGIES AND PROSPECTS FOR SUCCESS A PAPER IN SUPPORT OF THE HEARING ON NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR NEGOTIATIONS: STRATEGIES AND PROSPECTS FOR SUCCESS WILLIAM M. DRENNAN CONSULTANT JULY 14, 2005 SUBCOMMITTEE ON ASIA AND THE PACIFIC, HOUSE INTERNATIONAL

More information

The Korean Peninsula at a Glance

The Korean Peninsula at a Glance 6 Kim or his son. The outside world has known little of North Korea since the 1950s, due to the government s strict limit on the entry of foreigners. But refugees and defectors have told stories of abuse,

More information

NORPAC Hokkaido Conference for North Pacific Issues

NORPAC Hokkaido Conference for North Pacific Issues NORPAC Hokkaido Conference for North Pacific Issues Thursday, October 7, 2004 Hokkai Gakuen University Beyond Six Party Talks: An opportunity to establish a framework for multilateral cooperation in the

More information

USAPC Washington Report Interview with Prof. Joseph S. Nye, Jr. July 2006

USAPC Washington Report Interview with Prof. Joseph S. Nye, Jr. July 2006 USAPC Washington Report Interview with Prof. Joseph S. Nye, Jr. July 2006 USAPC: The 1995 East Asia Strategy Report stated that U.S. security strategy for Asia rests on three pillars: our alliances, particularly

More information

Yong Wook Lee Korea University Dept of Political Science and IR

Yong Wook Lee Korea University Dept of Political Science and IR Yong Wook Lee Korea University Dept of Political Science and IR 1 Issues Knowledge Historical Background of North Korea Nuclear Crisis (major chronology) Nature of NK s Nuclear Program Strategies Containment

More information

NORMALIZATION OF U.S.-DPRK RELATIONS

NORMALIZATION OF U.S.-DPRK RELATIONS CONFERENCE REPORT NORMALIZATION OF U.S.-DPRK RELATIONS A CONFERENCE ORGANIZED BY THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE ON AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY (NCAFP) AND THE KOREA SOCIETY MARCH 5, 2007 INTRODUCTION SUMMARY REPORT

More information

Peace Building on the Korean Peninsula and the Role of Japan

Peace Building on the Korean Peninsula and the Role of Japan Peace Building on the Korean Peninsula and the Role of Japan 13 June 2001 Professor Hisashi Owada Japan Institute of International Affairs 1. Introduction In the course of this past one year, the Korean

More information

Seoul-Washington Forum May 1-2, 2006

Seoul-Washington Forum May 1-2, 2006 Seoul-Washington Forum May 1-2, 2006 Panel 3 The R.O.K. s Self-Reliant Military Policy and the CFC: Replacing the Armistice MEETING CHALLENGES IN TRANSFORMING THE ALLIANCE PRUDENTLY Dong Shin Kim Former

More information

Perception gap among Japanese, Americans, Chinese, and South Koreans over the future of Northeast Asia and Challenges to Bring Peace to the Region

Perception gap among Japanese, Americans, Chinese, and South Koreans over the future of Northeast Asia and Challenges to Bring Peace to the Region The Genron NPO Japan-U.S.-China-ROK Opinion Poll Report Perception gap among, Americans,, and over the future of Northeast Asia and Challenges to Bring Peace to the Region Yasushi Kudo, President, The

More information

Autumn semester of Political Issues in. Contemporary Korean Politics. Professor : Taek Sun Lee

Autumn semester of Political Issues in. Contemporary Korean Politics. Professor : Taek Sun Lee Autumn semester of 2015 Political Issues in Contemporary Korean Politics Professor : Taek Sun Lee Week 3 Notes for class 1.Basically this class is in English, so you have to try use English as far as possible.

More information

Security Council. The situation in the Korean peninsula. Kaan Özdemir & Kardelen Hiçdönmez

Security Council. The situation in the Korean peninsula. Kaan Özdemir & Kardelen Hiçdönmez Security Council The situation in the Korean peninsula Kaan Özdemir & Kardelen Hiçdönmez Alman Lisesi Model United Nations 2018 Introduction The nuclear programme of North Korea and rising political tension

More information

Policy Brief. Between Hope and Misgivings: One Summit and many questions. Valérie Niquet. A Post Singapore summit analysis

Policy Brief. Between Hope and Misgivings: One Summit and many questions. Valérie Niquet. A Post Singapore summit analysis Valé rie Niquet is senior visiting fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs and head of the Asia program at Foundation for Strategic Research. She writes extensively on Asia-Pacific strategic

More information

Exploring Strategic Leadership of the ROK-U.S. Alliance in a Challenging Environment

Exploring Strategic Leadership of the ROK-U.S. Alliance in a Challenging Environment Exploring Strategic Leadership of the ROK-U.S. Alliance in a Challenging Environment Luncheon Keynote Address by The Honorable Hwang Jin Ha Member, National Assembly of the Republic of Korea The The Brookings

More information

GR132 Non-proliferation: current lessons from Iran and North Korea

GR132 Non-proliferation: current lessons from Iran and North Korea GR132 Non-proliferation: current lessons from Iran and North Korea The landmark disarmament deal with Libya, announced on 19 th December 2003, opened a brief window of optimism for those pursuing international

More information

Topic Research Guide

Topic Research Guide I. TopicResearchGuide Peace,SecurityandReunificationontheKoreanPeninsula The Korean question was brought before the United Nations General Assembly, and the goals of free elections and reunification of

More information

CHAPTER 20 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE

CHAPTER 20 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER 20 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE I. Politics in Action: A New Threat (pp. 621 622) A. The role of national security is more important than ever. B. New and complex challenges have

More information

Seoul, May 3, Co-Chairs Report

Seoul, May 3, Co-Chairs Report 2 nd Meeting of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific (CSCAP) Study Group on Multilateral Security Governance in Northeast Asia/North Pacific Seoul, May 3, 2011 Co-Chairs Report The

More information

Anti-Americanism in U.S.-Korean Relations (EASTASN 188K/288K) Spring 2008

Anti-Americanism in U.S.-Korean Relations (EASTASN 188K/288K) Spring 2008 Anti-Americanism in U.S.-Korean Relations (EASTASN 188K/288K) Spring 2008 Class Hours: Tuesdays, 2:15-4:05 P.M. Classroom: Bldg 260 007 (Pigott Hall) Instructor: David Straub Office Hours: Wednesdays,

More information

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6141st meeting, on 12 June 2009

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6141st meeting, on 12 June 2009 United Nations S/RES/1874 (2009) Security Council Distr.: General 12 June 2009 Resolution 1874 (2009) Adopted by the Security Council at its 6141st meeting, on 12 June 2009 The Security Council, Recalling

More information

THE NEXT CHAPTER IN US-ASIAN RELATIONS: WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE PACIFIC

THE NEXT CHAPTER IN US-ASIAN RELATIONS: WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE PACIFIC THE NEXT CHAPTER IN US-ASIAN RELATIONS: WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE PACIFIC Interview with Michael H. Fuchs Michael H. Fuchs is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and a senior policy advisor

More information

Inter-Korean Relations and the Future of the U.S. ROK Alliance. Choong Nam Kim, Ph.D. East-West Center, Honolulu, HI

Inter-Korean Relations and the Future of the U.S. ROK Alliance. Choong Nam Kim, Ph.D. East-West Center, Honolulu, HI Inter-Korean Relations and the Future of the U.S. ROK Alliance Choong Nam Kim, Ph.D. East-West Center, Honolulu, HI Introduction Relations between the Republic of Korea (ROK) and the Democratic People

More information

Public s security insensitivity, or changed security perceptions?

Public s security insensitivity, or changed security perceptions? 2013-03 Public s security insensitivity, or changed security perceptions? Han-wool Jeong The East Asia Institute APR 23, 2013 EAI OPINION Review Series EAI OPINION Review No. 2013-03 Public s security

More information

Triangular formations in Asia Genesis, strategies, value added and limitations

Triangular formations in Asia Genesis, strategies, value added and limitations 11 th Berlin Conference on Asian Security (BCAS) Triangular formations in Asia Genesis, strategies, value added and limitations Berlin, September 7-8, 2017 A conference organized by the German Institute

More information

U.S.-ROK ALLIANCE: LOOKING TOWARD THE FUTURE

U.S.-ROK ALLIANCE: LOOKING TOWARD THE FUTURE U.S.-ROK ALLIANCE: LOOKING TOWARD THE FUTURE Ting Xu I. INTRODUCTION It has been years since scholars started speculating about the future of the alliance between the U.S. and the Republic of Korea (ROK).

More information

The United States and North Korea

The United States and North Korea Joel Wit The United States and North Korea no. 74 March 2001 North Korea has been the poster child for rogue states for over five decades. It has pursued a nuclear weapons program, constructed and exported

More information

Speech at the seminar commemorating the publication of the English edition of Peacemaker (Stanford University, 18 May 2012)

Speech at the seminar commemorating the publication of the English edition of Peacemaker (Stanford University, 18 May 2012) Speech at the seminar commemorating the publication of the English edition of Peacemaker (Stanford University, 18 May 2012) Good afternoon. I want to thank you all for coming. I am happy to be here at

More information

UNIVERSITY OF TASMANIA Q & A ON NORTH KOREA JOEL HENG & THE HON. MICHAEL KIRBY. The Hon. Michael Kirby AC CMG

UNIVERSITY OF TASMANIA Q & A ON NORTH KOREA JOEL HENG & THE HON. MICHAEL KIRBY. The Hon. Michael Kirby AC CMG 2729 UNIVERSITY OF TASMANIA Q & A ON NORTH KOREA JOEL HENG & THE HON. MICHAEL KIRBY The Hon. Michael Kirby AC CMG UNIVERSITY OF TASMANIA Q&A ON NORTH KOREA JOEL HENG & THE HON. MICHAEL KIRBY Question 1.

More information

Japan s defence and security policy reform and its impact on regional security

Japan s defence and security policy reform and its impact on regional security Japan s defence and security policy reform and its impact on regional security March 22 nd, 2017 Subcommittee on Security and Defense, European Parliament Mission of Japan to the European Union Japan s

More information

FUTURE OF NORTH KOREA

FUTURE OF NORTH KOREA Ilmin International Relations Institute EXPERT SURVEY REPORT July 2014 FUTURE OF NORTH KOREA Future of North Korea Expert Survey Report The Ilmin International Relations Institute (Director: Kim Sung-han,

More information

Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen Remarks Prepared for Delivery to Chinese National Defense University Beij ing, China July 13,2000

Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen Remarks Prepared for Delivery to Chinese National Defense University Beij ing, China July 13,2000 Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen Remarks Prepared for Delivery to Chinese National Defense University Beij ing, China July 13,2000 Thank you very much, President Xing. It is a pleasure to return to

More information

THE EU AND THE SECURITY COUNCIL Current Challenges and Future Prospects

THE EU AND THE SECURITY COUNCIL Current Challenges and Future Prospects THE EU AND THE SECURITY COUNCIL Current Challenges and Future Prospects H.E. Michael Spindelegger Minister for Foreign Affairs of Austria Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination Woodrow Wilson School

More information

LEARNING OBJECTIVES After studying Chapter 20, you should be able to: 1. Identify the many actors involved in making and shaping American foreign policy and discuss the roles they play. 2. Describe how

More information

The Contemporary Strategic Setting

The Contemporary Strategic Setting Deakin University and the Centre for Defence and Strategic Studies The Contemporary Strategic Setting PRINCIPAL DRIVERS OF SECURITY DYNAMICS ON THE KOREAN PENINSULA: INTERNAL AND EXTRENAL FACTORS AND INFLUENCES

More information

SS7H3e Brain Wrinkles

SS7H3e Brain Wrinkles SS7H3e End of WWII The United States, Soviet Union, and Great Britain made an agreement on how they would after World War II. Each country was supposed to the lands that were impacted by the war. They

More information

JAPAN-RUSSIA-US TRILATERAL CONFERENCE ON THE SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NORTHEAST ASIA

JAPAN-RUSSIA-US TRILATERAL CONFERENCE ON THE SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NORTHEAST ASIA JAPAN-RUSSIA-US TRILATERAL CONFERENCE ON THE SECURITY CHALLENGES IN NORTHEAST ASIA The Trilateral Conference on security challenges in Northeast Asia is organized jointly by the Institute of World Economy

More information

Questioning America Again

Questioning America Again Questioning America Again Yerim Kim, Yonsei University Chang Sei-jin. Sangsangdoen America: 1945 nyǒn 8wol ihu Hangukui neisǒn seosanǔn ǒtteoke mandǔleogǒtnǔnga 상상된아메리카 : 1945 년 8 월이후한국의네이션서사는어떻게만들어졌는가

More information

How Diplomacy With North Korea Can Work

How Diplomacy With North Korea Can Work PHILIP ZELIKOW SUBSCRIBE ANDREW HARNIK / POOL VIA REUTERS U SNAPSHOT July 9, 2018 How Diplomacy With North Korea Can Work A Narrow Focus on Denuclearization Is the Wrong Strategy By Philip Zelikow At the

More information

Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises. Session III: North Korea s nuclear program

Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises. Session III: North Korea s nuclear program 10 th Berlin Conference on Asian Security (BCAS) Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises Berlin, June 19-21, 2016 A conference jointly organized by Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik

More information

US-Japan Relations. Past, Present, and Future

US-Japan Relations. Past, Present, and Future US-Japan Relations: Past, Present, and Future Hitoshi Tanaka Hitoshi Tanaka is a senior fellow at the Japan Center for International Exchange and chairman of the Japan Research Institute s Institute for

More information

North Korea s Nuclear Weapons: The Ultimate Tool for Unification?

North Korea s Nuclear Weapons: The Ultimate Tool for Unification? 7 North Korea s Nuclear Weapons: The Ultimate Tool for Unification? Hideshi Takesada Abstract The misgivings surrounding North Korea s nuclear weapons development program show no signs of improvement,

More information

United States Policy on Iraqi Aggression Resolution. October 1, House Joint Resolution 658

United States Policy on Iraqi Aggression Resolution. October 1, House Joint Resolution 658 United States Policy on Iraqi Aggression Resolution October 1, 1990 House Joint Resolution 658 101st CONGRESS 2d Session JOINT RESOLUTION To support actions the President has taken with respect to Iraqi

More information

Address. H.E. Dr. Shin Kak-soo. Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade. of the Republic of Korea. of the United Nations.

Address. H.E. Dr. Shin Kak-soo. Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade. of the Republic of Korea. of the United Nations. Check against Delivery Address by H.E. Dr. Shin Kak-soo Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Korea at the 65 th Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations 25 September

More information

A Peace Treaty with North Korea?

A Peace Treaty with North Korea? Emma Chanlett-Avery Specialist in Asian Affairs Susan V. Lawrence Specialist in Asian Affairs Mark E. Manyin Specialist in Asian Affairs Mary Beth D. Nikitin Specialist in Nonproliferation April 19, 2018

More information

PacNet. The New US-Japan Relationship: Security and Economy RIETI, Tokyo, May 24, 2001

PacNet. The New US-Japan Relationship: Security and Economy RIETI, Tokyo, May 24, 2001 The New US-Japan Relationship: Security and Economy RIETI, Tokyo, May 24, 2001 Ralph, President, Pacific Forum Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) The following remarks are my opinion.

More information

The Honorable Maurice F. Strong. North Korea at the Crossroads Prospects for a Comprehensive Settlement

The Honorable Maurice F. Strong. North Korea at the Crossroads Prospects for a Comprehensive Settlement Notes for Remarks Delivered at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C. by The Honorable Maurice F. Strong Special Advisor to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Undersecretary-General

More information

Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises. Session III: North Korea s nuclear program

Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises. Session III: North Korea s nuclear program 10 th Berlin Conference on Asian Security (BCAS) Nuclear Stability in Asia Strengthening Order in Times of Crises Berlin, June 19-21, 2016 A conference jointly organized by Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik

More information

Statement. H. E. Cho Tae-yul. Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs. Republic of Korea. at the. IAEA International Conference on Nuclear Security:

Statement. H. E. Cho Tae-yul. Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs. Republic of Korea. at the. IAEA International Conference on Nuclear Security: (Check against delivery) Statement by H. E. Cho Tae-yul Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Republic of Korea at the IAEA International Conference on Nuclear Security: Enhancing Global Efforts IAEA Headquarters

More information

USAPC Washington Report Interview with Amb. Morton Abramowitz September 2006

USAPC Washington Report Interview with Amb. Morton Abramowitz September 2006 USAPC Washington Report Interview with Amb. Morton Abramowitz September 2006 USAPC: In Chasing the Sun, you and Amb. Stephen Bosworth say it is very important for the United States to remain engaged with

More information

KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES

KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES WORKING PEOPLE OF THE WHOLE WORLD, UNITE! KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN

More information

SECRET OF KOREA AN CHI YONG

SECRET OF KOREA AN CHI YONG MEMORANDUM OF CONVERSATION SUBJECT: PARTICIPANTS: DATE, TIME AND PLACE: The President The Vice President James A. Baker, III, Secretary of State Nicholas F. Brady, Secretary of the Treasury Richard B.

More information

RELOCATING TRILATERALISM IN A BROADER REGIONAL ARCHITECTURE A SOUTH KOREAN PERSPECTIVE

RELOCATING TRILATERALISM IN A BROADER REGIONAL ARCHITECTURE A SOUTH KOREAN PERSPECTIVE POLITICAL AND SECURITY AFFAIRS RELOCATING TRILATERALISM IN A BROADER REGIONAL ARCHITECTURE A SOUTH KOREAN PERSPECTIVE A brief for the Pacific Trilateralism Project by Yul Sohn E ver since the Trilateral

More information

Overview East Asia in 2006

Overview East Asia in 2006 Overview East Asia in 2006 1. The Growing Influence of China North Korea s launch of ballistic missiles on July 5, 2006, and its announcement that it conducted an underground nuclear test on October 9

More information

Ask an Expert: Dr. Jim Walsh on the North Korean Nuclear Threat

Ask an Expert: Dr. Jim Walsh on the North Korean Nuclear Threat Ask an Expert: Dr. Jim Walsh on the North Korean Nuclear Threat In this interview, Center contributor Dr. Jim Walsh analyzes the threat that North Korea s nuclear weapons program poses to the U.S. and

More information

This interview of PCI Board Member, Professor Chung-in Moon, appeared in the Korea Times on Thursday, November 01, 2018.

This interview of PCI Board Member, Professor Chung-in Moon, appeared in the Korea Times on Thursday, November 01, 2018. This interview of PCI Board Member, Professor Chung-in Moon, appeared in the Korea Times on Thursday, November 01, 2018. National2018-10-31 10:28 [INTERVIEW] 'There's no way out if US sees North Korea

More information

THE TWO REPORTS PUBLISHED IN THIS DOCUMENT are the

THE TWO REPORTS PUBLISHED IN THIS DOCUMENT are the 01-joint (p1-6) 4/7/00 1:45 PM Page 1 JOINT STATEMENT THE TWO REPORTS PUBLISHED IN THIS DOCUMENT are the product of a unique project involving leading U.S. and Russian policy analysts and former senior

More information

The Narrative Threat of North Korea: An Initial Assessment

The Narrative Threat of North Korea: An Initial Assessment The Narrative Threat of North Korea: An Initial Assessment Strategic Discourse Analysis (STRADA) Group, New Mexico State University April 29, 2013 In recent weeks, analysts, scholars, and government leaders

More information

Hearing on the Northern Ireland Peace Process Today: Attempting to Deal With the Past

Hearing on the Northern Ireland Peace Process Today: Attempting to Deal With the Past March 11, 2014 Prepared statement by Richard N. Haass President Council on Foreign Relations and Former Independent Chair Panel of Parties in the Northern Ireland Executive Before the Committee on Foreign

More information

U.S.-China Relations and the Korean Peninsula

U.S.-China Relations and the Korean Peninsula U.S.-China Relations and the Korean Peninsula By Scott Snyder Korea Representative, The Asia Foundation 1 The United States and the PRC share a near-term interest in stability on the Korean peninsula,

More information

AS History. The Cold War, c /2R To the brink of Nuclear War; international relations, c Mark scheme.

AS History. The Cold War, c /2R To the brink of Nuclear War; international relations, c Mark scheme. AS History The Cold War, c1945 1991 7041/2R To the brink of Nuclear War; international relations, c1945 1963 Mark scheme 7041 June 2016 Version: 1.0 Final Mark schemes are prepared by the Lead Assessment

More information

TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY 3 KEY OUTCOMES 4. Assessing Asia-Pacific Regional Order 6. South Korea s and Australia s Asia-Pacific Policies 8

TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY 3 KEY OUTCOMES 4. Assessing Asia-Pacific Regional Order 6. South Korea s and Australia s Asia-Pacific Policies 8 KINU-ASPI TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY 3 KEY OUTCOMES 4 Assessing Asia-Pacific Regional Order 6 South Korea s and Australia s Asia-Pacific Policies 8 Dr. Jin Park s Keynote Luncheon Speech 10 South Korea-Australia

More information

MONTHLY RECAP: DECEMBER

MONTHLY RECAP: DECEMBER MONTHLY RECAP: DECEMBER On December 1, North Korea began enforcing restrictions on the number of South Koreans allowed to stay in the Kaesong Industrial Complex, limiting ROK workers to only 880, which

More information

NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY NATIONAL WAR COLLEGE THREAT ANALYSIS NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR PROGRAM

NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY NATIONAL WAR COLLEGE THREAT ANALYSIS NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR PROGRAM NATIONAL DEFENSE UNIVERSITY NATIONAL WAR COLLEGE THREAT ANALYSIS NORTH KOREAN NUCLEAR PROGRAM PETER J. ROWAN 5601 FUNDAMENTALS OF STRATEGIC LOGIC SEMINAR I PROFESSOR CAPT. GEORGE MURPHY ADVISOR LTC ROBERT

More information

Report Rethinking deterrence and assurance Western deterrence strategies: at an inflection point? Wednesday 14 Saturday 17 June 2017 WP1545

Report Rethinking deterrence and assurance Western deterrence strategies: at an inflection point? Wednesday 14 Saturday 17 June 2017 WP1545 Image: Sergeant Tom Robinson RLC Report Rethinking deterrence and assurance Western deterrence strategies: at an inflection point? Wednesday 14 Saturday 17 June 2017 WP1545 In association with: Report

More information

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30 Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30 18 April 2018 Original: English Second session Geneva,

More information

The North Korean Nuclear Threat. July 1,

The North Korean Nuclear Threat. July 1, Smart Talk 2 Charles L. Pritchard The North Korean Nuclear Threat July 1, 2009 Presenter Charles L. Pritchard Discussants Chaesung Chun Youngsun Ha Jihwan Hwang Byung-Kook Kim Sook-Jong Lee Seongho Sheen

More information

Mikhail Gorbachev s Address to Participants in the International Conference The Legacy of the Reykjavik Summit

Mikhail Gorbachev s Address to Participants in the International Conference The Legacy of the Reykjavik Summit Mikhail Gorbachev s Address to Participants in the International Conference The Legacy of the Reykjavik Summit 1 First of all, I want to thank the government of Iceland for invitation to participate in

More information

American Legion Support for a U.S. Foreign Policy of "Democratic Activism"

American Legion Support for a U.S. Foreign Policy of Democratic Activism American Legion Support for a U.S. Foreign Policy of "Democratic Activism" The American Legion recognizes the unprecedented changes that have taken place in the international security environment since

More information

PEAR: How would you describe China s current efforts to engage countries in East Asia using traditional bilateral relationships?

PEAR: How would you describe China s current efforts to engage countries in East Asia using traditional bilateral relationships? Interview 307 A HISTORIAN S PERSPECTIVE: UNDERSTANDING CHINA AND NORTH KOREA Interview with Professor John Delury Yonsei University Graduate School of International Studies John Delury is assistant professor

More information

US-China Diplomatic and Security Dialogue: At the Crossroads of Strategic Distrust

US-China Diplomatic and Security Dialogue: At the Crossroads of Strategic Distrust INSTITUTE OF STRATEGIC STUDIES web: www.issi.org.pk phone: +92-920-4423, 24 fax: +92-920-4658 Issue Brief (Views expressed in the brief are those of the author, and do not represent those of ISSI) US-China

More information

China s Foreign Policy toward North Korea A US Perspective 1

China s Foreign Policy toward North Korea A US Perspective 1 China s Foreign Policy toward North Korea A US Perspective 1 Robert Sutter, Ph.D. Georgetown University With the collapse of the Soviet Union and the demise of East-West and Sino-Soviet competition for

More information

The Difficult Road to Peaceful Development

The Difficult Road to Peaceful Development April 2011 2010 The Difficult Road to Peaceful Development Fulfilling International Responsibilities and Promises Political Reform Needs to Be Actively Promoted Chi Hung Kwan Senior Fellow, Nomura Institute

More information

CHAPTER 17 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE

CHAPTER 17 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER 17 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE I. American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers (pp. 547-556) A. Foreign Policy involves making choices about relations with

More information

Untangling the Spirit of Han on the Korean Peninsula & the Future of Trustpolitik. By Hugh Segal and Tina J. Park

Untangling the Spirit of Han on the Korean Peninsula & the Future of Trustpolitik. By Hugh Segal and Tina J. Park By Hugh Segal and Tina J. Park A POLICY September PAPER 2015 POLICY UPDATE Untangling the Spirit of Han on the Korean Prepared for the Canadian Global Affairs Institute 1600, 530 8th Avenue S.W., Calgary,

More information

Weekly Newsletter. No.452. RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR NORTH KOREAN SOCIETY

Weekly Newsletter. No.452. RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR NORTH KOREAN SOCIETY RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR NORTH KOREAN SOCIETY http://www.goodfriends.or.kr/goodfriends.usa@gmail.com Weekly Newsletter No.452 (Released in Korean on April 25, 2012) [ Good Friends aims to help the North

More information

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.33

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.33 Preparatory Committee for the 2020 Review Conference of the Parties to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.33 19 April 2018 Original: English Second session Geneva,

More information

The 2012 South Korean presidential election

The 2012 South Korean presidential election DIRECTORATE-GENERAL FOR EXTERNAL POLICIES POLICY DEPARTMENT QUICK POLICY INSIGHT The 2012 South Korean presidential election Authors: Lukas GAJDOS, Roberto BENDINI Candidates The conservative candidate

More information

POST-CHEONAN DPRK FOREIGN POLICY: SIGNS AND SIGNALS

POST-CHEONAN DPRK FOREIGN POLICY: SIGNS AND SIGNALS SPECIAL REPORT 8 38 NORTH Informed analysis of events in and around the DPRK. OCTOBER 11, 2010 Post-Cheonan DPRK Foreign Policy: Signs and Signals 38 NORTH 38 North is a web-based initiative that harnesses

More information

Scott Snyder Director, Center for U.S.-Korea Policy, The Asia Foundation Adjunct Senior Fellow for Korean Studies, Council on Foreign Relations

Scott Snyder Director, Center for U.S.-Korea Policy, The Asia Foundation Adjunct Senior Fellow for Korean Studies, Council on Foreign Relations Scott Snyder Director, Center for U.S.-Korea Policy, The Asia Foundation Adjunct Senior Fellow for Korean Studies, Council on Foreign Relations February 12, 2009 Smart Power: Remaking U.S. Foreign Policy

More information

North Korea s Hard-Line Behavior: Background & Response

North Korea s Hard-Line Behavior: Background & Response Editorial Note: This is the inaugural issue of the Korea Platform, an independent and non-partisan platform for informed voices on policy issues related to the United States and the Republic of Korea.

More information

ADVANCING U.S.-JAPAN-ROK TRILATERAL COOPERATION A U.S. PERSPECTIVE

ADVANCING U.S.-JAPAN-ROK TRILATERAL COOPERATION A U.S. PERSPECTIVE POLITICAL AND SECURITY AFFAIRS ADVANCING U.S.-JAPAN-ROK TRILATERAL COOPERATION A U.S. PERSPECTIVE A brief for the Pacific Trilateralism Project by Daniel Sneider R ecent developments lend hope to the prospects

More information

KORET FOUNDATION-SPONSORED WORKSHOP ON KOREAN AFFAIRS

KORET FOUNDATION-SPONSORED WORKSHOP ON KOREAN AFFAIRS KORET FOUNDATION-SPONSORED WORKSHOP ON KOREAN AFFAIRS KOREAN STUDIES PROGRAM SHORENSTEIN ASIA-PACIFIC RESEARCH CENTER STANFORD UNIVERSITY MARCH 19-20, 2009 ENHANCING SOUTH KOREA S SECURITY: THE U.S. ALLIANCE

More information

CHINA POLICY FOR THE NEXT U.S. ADMINISTRATION 183

CHINA POLICY FOR THE NEXT U.S. ADMINISTRATION 183 CHINA POLICY FOR THE NEXT U.S. ADMINISTRATION 183 CHINA POLICY FOR THE NEXT U.S. ADMINISTRATION Harry Harding Issue: Should the United States fundamentally alter its policy toward Beijing, given American

More information

DOCUMENT ANALYSIS OF THE POST-WWII PARTITIONING OF KOREA

DOCUMENT ANALYSIS OF THE POST-WWII PARTITIONING OF KOREA DOCUMENT ANALYSIS OF THE POST-WWII PARTITIONING OF KOREA GRADES: High School AUTHOR: Nancy Bader SUBJECT: AP or Regular World History, Post WWII TIME REQUIRED: One to two class periods OBJECTIVES: 1. Investigate

More information