S. Korea's Moon
heads to US as North threat grows
SEOUL, June 26, (AFP) - South Korea's dovish new President Moon Jae-In -- who backs engagement with the nuclear-armed North -- heads to Washington this week for talks with his hawkish US counterpart Donald Trump, as Pyongyang defies international sanctions to accelerate its missile programme.
SEOUL, June 26, (AFP) - South Korea's dovish new President Moon Jae-In -- who backs engagement with the nuclear-armed North -- heads to Washington this week for talks with his hawkish US counterpart Donald Trump, as Pyongyang defies international sanctions to accelerate its missile programme.
Centre-left
Moon suggested on the campaign trail that as president he would be willing to
go to Pyongyang before Washington, but he is making the US his first foreign
destination since he was sworn in last month after a landslide election win.
Washington is the South's security
guarantor and has more than 28,000 troops in the country to defend it from its
neighbour, which has been intensifying missile tests -- including five since
Moon's inauguration -- as it seeks to develop nuclear-capable ballistic
missiles that could reach the continental United States.
There have been misgivings about the
first tete-a-tete between Moon and Trump, who is pushing for tougher sanctions
against Pyongyang to curb its nuclear ambitions and whose administration has
said military action was a possibility.
That would put Seoul on the front line
of any retaliation from the North.
But
analysts say their first encounter is likely to be low on drama with the two
getting a sense of each other, rather than displaying jarring differences. Trump's
policy of "maximum pressure and engagement" has a wide range from
diplomacy to sanctions, allowing for an "overlap" with that of Moon,
who has never denied the need for sanctions even while seeking dialogue, said
John Delury, a professor at Yonsei University.
"So there doesn't have to be a
train wreck over North Korea policy," he told AFP. Also high on the agenda
is likely to be a controversial US missile defence system that has been
installed in South Korea to guard against missile threats from the North. Though
parts of the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system are already in
place, Moon suspended further deployment following a furious campaign of
economic sanctions and diplomatic protests by Beijing against the US missile
shield, dealing a blow to Washington's regional security policy.
Officially, the delay is to allow for
a new, comprehensive environmental impact assessment, but analysts say the move
is a strategic one by Moon to delay the tricky diplomatic situation he
inherited.- 'Ruffled feathers' -Earlier this year Moon raised many eyebrows
when he said in a new book that Seoul should learn to say "no" to
Washington. But analysts say the South Korean leader -- whose parents were
refugees evacuated from the North by US forces -- will endeavour in Washington
to portray their decades-old alliance as intact.
"Moon will seek to smooth ruffled
feathers in Washington and give an impression that there is no daylight between
the two allies," Sejong Institute analyst Hong Hyun-Ik told AFP. Hong said
that Moon "initially appeared to walk a tightrope between China and the
United States" but was forced back to "the US orbit" under
enormous pressure from his conservative political opponents.
The South Korean president advocates a
two-phased approach to the North's nuclear issue, with Pyongyang first freezing
its nuclear and long-range missile tests in return for the scaling back of
annual US-South Korea military exercises. In the second stage, the North's
nuclear programmes would be completely dismantled in return for diplomatic ties
and economic assistance.
The idea is similar to China's
standing proposal of "dual suspension" of US-South Korea war games
and the North's nuclear and missile tests, which Washington has already
rejected. For Moon, analysts say pursuing such an approach has been made more
complicated by last week's death of American student Otto Warmbier, who had
been jailed by the North. Warmbier fell into a mysterious coma after being in
prison for 18 months for stealing a political poster. He died days after being
evacuated home, sparking outrage in the US.
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