Foreword
The
Sejong Institute has continuously strived to establish South Korea’s strategy
regarding foreign affairs, national security, and Korean unification, with the
brand of “National Strategy.” As a response
to the rapidly-shifting strategic landscape domestically and internationally,
the Sejong Institute published five volumes of National Strategy 2020 in 2005 and published three volumes of National Strategy 2030 in 2016 after the
planning in 2015. Indeed, the institute also makes efforts
to aid the South Korean government‘s policy-making for the mid-to-long term by
holding Sejong National Strategy Forum twice every year. It published the
research outcome, The New U.S.
Administration and Pending Issues between ROK and the U.S., after analyzing
the Trump administration’s foreign policy, policy regarding the Korean
Peninsula to be exact, which was inaugurated in January 2017, and revising the
details to assist the policy formulation of the Moon Jae-in administration
which was inaugurated in May 2017, toward the U.S.
As
Dr. Lee Daewoo elucidates in the preface, in the midst of North Korea’s
nuclear and missile development threatening the international community beyond
Northeast Asia, the uncertainty surrounding the Korean Peninsula and the
international security environment have further escalated as Donald Trump, a
businessman of peculiar personality without any experience in the public
office, was elected as the 45th President of the United States. In such circumstances, pending issues
between South Korea and the U.S. have emerged such as policy coordination
regarding North Korea, the renegotiations of KORUS FTA, and measures to enhance
ROK-U.S. alliance. The book focuses on measures to resolve these issues through
analysis of the bones of contention within these issues.
In
the first chapter, Dr. Lee Sang Hyun prospects the Trump administration’s
tenets of foreign policy strategy and policy orientation and generally analyzes
the pending issues in setting relations with the new South Korean
administration. When
negotiating with the U.S. on the contending issues between the two countries,
Dr. Lee underscores that the South Korean government should be cognizant of the
point that President Trump adheres to transactional state-to-state relations
and hardline stance on China and hence, demonstrate in numbers that South
Korea’s share of defense costs contributes to the stationing of U.S. Forces in
Korea and KORUS FTA contributes to job creation.
On the second
chapter concerning the DPRK-U.S. relations and ROK-U.S. coordination on North
Korea policy, Dr. Park Jong-chul of Korea Institute for National Unification
summarized the Trump administration’s policy option regarding North Korea in
four different kinds — sanctions, diplomatic and military pressure,
regime change, and dialogue — and suggested different scenarios for DPRK-U.S.
relations based on the mentioned policy options — partial
compromise of nuclear freeze, North Korea’s denuclearization, recognition of
North Korea’s nuclear possession, and military clash. In light of such
scenarios, he concluded with the order of possibility — the
recognition of North Korea’s nuclear possession, North Korea’s
denuclearization, military clash, and North Korea’s nuclear freeze — the latter
being more probable. Meanwhile, he regarded that the most
desirable scenario for South Korea will be North Korea‘s denuclearization, followed
by North Korea’s nuclear freeze, while military clash and the acknowledgment of
North Korea as a nuclear power as worst case scenarios.
Professor Lee
Wang-hwi of Ajou University writes that the Trump administration’s external
economic policy will bring considerable changes to U.S. economic diplomacy
overall, not to mention the ROK-U.S. trade relations and asserts that ‘America
First’ — the notion that President Trump underlines — hints at a
transition in U.S. economic policy, thus a review of overall U.S. economic
policy to achieve the goal of ‘job creation’ in the third chapter. However,
he prospects that South Korea and the U.S. will not hassle in economic terms,
with some concessions from the South Korean side in consideration of the
security situation. He claims that South Korea should enhance lobby activities
toward the U.S. Congress and expand direct investment in the U.S., emphasizing
that it should extricate from the perception that the KORUS FTA renegotiations
will be disadvantageous to South Korea.
In the final
chapter, Dr. Lee Daewoo of the Sejong Institute lays out five security issues
standing between South Korea and the U.S., with both countries having new
administrations this year — by a four-month time difference. These issues
are the THAAD deployment on the Korean Peninsula and the cost involved, the
share of defense burden, the reinforcement of ROK-U.S.-Japan trilateral
security cooperation, the early transfer of wartime operational control
(OPCON), the enhancement of international cooperation of ROK-U.S. alliance.
Nonetheless, he viewed that as these issues could be resolved without
difficulty between the Moon Jae-in administration and the Trump administration,
they will not have a negative impact on the bilateral ties overall.
Volume No.: 2017-9
Publisher: The Sejong Institute
Publication Date: November 15, 2017
Paperback, 184 Pages