The Korea Times
amn_close.png
amn_bl.png
National
  • Politics
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Multicultural Community
  • Defense
  • Environment & Animals
  • Law & Crime
  • Society
  • Health & Science
amn_bl.png
Business
  • Tech
  • Bio
  • Companies
amn_bl.png
Finance
  • Companies
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Cryptocurrency
amn_bl.png
Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Thoughts of the Times
  • Cartoon
  • Today in History
  • Blogs
  • Tribune Service
  • Blondie & Garfield
  • Letter to President
  • Letter to the Editor
amn_bl.png
Lifestyle
  • Travel & Food
  • Trends
  • People & Events
  • Books
  • Around Town
  • Fortune Telling
amn_bl.png
Entertainment & Arts
  • K-pop
  • Films
  • Shows & Dramas
  • Music
  • Theater & Others
amn_bl.png
Sports
amn_bl.png
World
  • SCMP
  • Asia
amn_bl.png
Video
  • Korean Storytellers
  • POPKORN
  • Culture
  • People
  • News
amn_bl.png
Photos
  • Photo News
  • Darkroom
amn_NK.png amn_DR.png amn_LK.png amn_LE.png
  • bt_fb_on_2022.svgbt_fb_over_2022.svg
  • bt_twitter_on_2022.svgbt_twitter_over_2022.svg
  • bt_youtube_on_2022.svgbt_youtube_over_2022.svg
  • bt_instagram_on_2022.svgbt_instagram_over_2022.svg
The Korea Times
amn_close.png
amn_bl.png
National
  • Politics
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Multicultural Community
  • Defense
  • Environment & Animals
  • Law & Crime
  • Society
  • Health & Science
amn_bl.png
Business
  • Tech
  • Bio
  • Companies
amn_bl.png
Finance
  • Companies
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Cryptocurrency
amn_bl.png
Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Thoughts of the Times
  • Cartoon
  • Today in History
  • Blogs
  • Tribune Service
  • Blondie & Garfield
  • Letter to President
  • Letter to the Editor
amn_bl.png
Lifestyle
  • Travel & Food
  • Trends
  • People & Events
  • Books
  • Around Town
  • Fortune Telling
amn_bl.png
Entertainment & Arts
  • K-pop
  • Films
  • Shows & Dramas
  • Music
  • Theater & Others
amn_bl.png
Sports
amn_bl.png
World
  • SCMP
  • Asia
amn_bl.png
Video
  • Korean Storytellers
  • POPKORN
  • Culture
  • People
  • News
amn_bl.png
Photos
  • Photo News
  • Darkroom
amn_NK.png amn_DR.png amn_LK.png amn_LE.png
  • bt_fb_on_2022.svgbt_fb_over_2022.svg
  • bt_twitter_on_2022.svgbt_twitter_over_2022.svg
  • bt_youtube_on_2022.svgbt_youtube_over_2022.svg
  • bt_instagram_on_2022.svgbt_instagram_over_2022.svg
  • Login
  • Register
  • Login
  • Register
  • The Korea Times
  • search
  • all menu
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Photos
  • Video
  • World
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Entertainment & Art
  • Lifestyle
  • Finance
  • Business
  • National
  • North Korea
  • 1

    Song Joong-ki marries British woman, expects baby

  • 3

    Suicidal pedestrian saved over Han River bridge

  • 5

    Kim Jung-hyun returns to small screen with 'Kokdu: Season of Deity'

  • 7

    Youth, foreign drug offenders increase threefold in 5 years

  • 9

    NK rejects alleged arms trading with Russia, warns of 'undesirable result'

  • 11

    'Someday or One Day' cast says film spin-off has new plot

  • 13

    Plum trees, pheasants and promises of old Korea

  • 15

    Base taxi fare to rise by 1,000 won to 4,800 won next month

  • 17

    3 dead, 4 hurt in upmarket Los Angeles neighborhood

  • 19

    NATO chief calls for stronger security ties with S. Korea to counter China

  • 2

    Japanese teen romance film attracts 1 mil. Korean viewers for 1st time in 21 yrs

  • 4

    Korea to lift indoor mask mandate Monday

  • 6

    US four-star general warns of war with China in 2025

  • 8

    INTERVIEWBusan has potential to be world-class city, says mayor

  • 10

    Samsung to introduce low-carbon diet for employees to help tackle climate change

  • 12

    Seoul International School celebrates 50th anniversary

  • 14

    K-pop releases for February

  • 16

    Main opposition leader faces pressure to resign in case of indictment

  • 18

    S. Korea mistakenly fires machine gun near border with N. Korea

  • 20

    Bank operating hours return to normal amid union opposition

Close scrollclosebutton

Close for 24 hours

Open
  • The Korea Times
  • search
  • all menu
  • Login
  • Subscribe
  • Photos
  • Video
  • World
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Entertainment & Art
  • Lifestyle
  • Finance
  • Business
  • National
  • North Korea
Opinion
  • Yun Byung-se
  • Kim Won-soo
  • Ahn Ho-young
  • Kim Sang-woo
  • Lee Kyung-hwa
  • Mitch Shin
  • Peter S. Kim
  • Daniel Shin
  • Jeon Su-mi
  • Jang Daul
  • Song Kyung-jin
  • Park Jung-won
  • Cho Hee-kyoung
  • Park Chong-hoon
  • Kim Sung-woo
  • Donald Kirk
  • John Burton
  • Robert D. Atkinson
  • Mark Peterson
  • Eugene Lee
  • Rushan Ziatdinov
  • Lee Jong-eun
  • Chyung Eun-ju and Joel Cho
  • Bernhard J. Seliger
  • Imran Khalid
  • Troy Stangarone
  • Jason Lim
  • Casey Lartigue, Jr.
  • Bernard Rowan
  • Steven L. Shields
  • Deauwand Myers
  • John J. Metzler
  • Andrew Hammond
  • Sandip Kumar Mishra
Tue, January 31, 2023 | 00:45
Deauwand Myers
Moon and his neighbors
Posted : 2021-03-15 16:52
Updated : 2021-03-15 16:52
Print PreviewPrint Preview
Font Size UpFont Size Up
Font Size DownFont Size Down
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • kakaolink
  • whatsapp
  • reddit
  • mailto
  • link
By Deauwand Myers

Literally, for centuries, Korea has been geographically and geopolitically stuck between implacable nation-states: adversarial and powerful. Whether it be the Mongolians, the Chinese, the Japanese or more recently North Korea, Korean society has endured being rolled over by wars and the rumor of wars for most of its existence.

Some 5,000 years of resistance and valiant attempts at maintaining cultural and geographical integrity has taught Korean governments, whether royalty (King Sejong), quasi-dictatorships (President Park Chung-hee) or democratic Korea, to negotiate national interests with those of its neighbors.

President Moon, particularly after the recent, dramatic election of America's President Joe Biden, is placed in a precarious, yet familiar, position.

What's new, by historical standards, is the injection of the United States into East Asian affairs. America has a rather complicated and bloody history with this region of the world. The United States' defeat of Imperial Japan, though unnecessarily brutal (the firebombing of civilian targets, and the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki are examples) ushered in an age of democracy for the second-largest economy on earth (this rank has been taken over by China, who, by some metrics, may have supplanted the United States as the biggest economy in the world. Though, per capita, Americans earn more income than their Chinese counterparts).

About half a decade after the end of World War II, the United States entered the Korean War, a sad affair bifurcating the Korean Peninsula and setting up the status quo in which President Moon finds himself.

The challenges facing Korea and its relationships with its neighbors are not enviable. How does the Korean government revitalize its economy and strengthen ties with a conservative government like Japan, one in which former Prime Minister Abe and his Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) too often indulged in revisionist history or played apologists for Imperial Japan's atrocities before and during World War II?

Is Japan a good faith partner in the international community's pursuit of a peaceful and durable rapprochement with North Korea? Does Japan want a sustainable and thriving economic relationship with Korea, a seemingly natural fit considering both Korea and Japan's strongest and most important ally is the United States, wherein both countries host large American military bases and are covered under America's defensive nuclear umbrella?

Finally, and most importantly in regard to Japan's future diplomatic ties to Korea, is the newly elected Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga as stridently insensitive to Korea's and China's appropriate indignation at former Prime Minister Abe and company's penchant to romanticize Imperial Japan's behavior in Korea and Manchuria?

Prime Minister Suga, a strawberry farmer by family trade, is far less vocal on any issue, including Imperial Japan, than his predecessor. However, he was the longest-serving chief cabinet secretary (basically an amalgamation of chief of staff, vice prime minister and chief policy adviser to the prime minister) in Japanese history. Further, he served in this position from 2012 to 2020 under Abe and shares Abe's ideology, which would invariably include a refurbishing and reimagining of Imperial Japan's brutal conquest of much of Asia as something other than what it was: evil.

President Moon of the Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) has deftly navigated his administration's relationship with the nation's biggest neighbor, China. Though the Moon administration officially calls on human rights reforms within Chinese society like its biggest ally, the United States, Korean foreign policy towards China has been fairly deferential, much more so than with Japan (obviously, for historical reasons).

President Moon has been exceedingly prudent in his and his administration's interactions with China, and with good reason. Korea must engage a country of 1.3 billion people, with a burgeoning middle class, a modernizing military and nuclear arsenal and an unabashedly assertive foreign policy (sometimes violently so, as with the recent and fatal skirmishes between India and China at the Sino-Indian border, near the disputed Pangong Lake and the Tibet Autonomous Region). China's unilateral and illegal claims of sovereignty over much of the South China Sea, claims made even more real after China constructed artificial islands throughout the area and had them militarized, doesn't make said engagement any easier.

Then there's China's leader. Xi Jinping brooks no political dissent even mildly different from his own, has committed cultural genocide to most of the minority Uyghur Muslim population in the northwest province of Xinjiang, all but annihilated democracy in Hong Kong (violating the treaty China signed with Britain when the city was returned to the mainland), constantly threatens to militarily take over democratic and independent Taiwan and has created a vast police state, surveillance network and a propaganda machine touting Xi within a cult of personality.

All this, and President Moon hasn't had much time to get to know President Biden. We should all wish President Moon the best of luck. He's going to need it.


Deauwand Myers (deauwand@hotmail.com) holds a master's degree in English literature and literary theory, and is an English professor outside Seoul. The views expressed in the above article are the author's own and do not reflect the editorial direction of The Korea Times.


 
Top 10 Stories
1[ANALYSIS] Pandemic awakens demand for data-driven automation ANALYSISPandemic awakens demand for data-driven automation
2Koreans reluctant to unmask on first day of eased indoor mask rule Koreans reluctant to unmask on first day of eased indoor mask rule
3Busan seeks to take lead in expo race after BIE's April visit Busan seeks to take lead in expo race after BIE's April visit
4Over 76% of South Koreans support development of nuclear weaponsOver 76% of South Koreans support development of nuclear weapons
5Retailers seek to bolster beauty product sales as lifting of mask mandate approaches Retailers seek to bolster beauty product sales as lifting of mask mandate approaches
6Biohealth geared for growth Biohealth geared for growth
7Stock-leveraged investments rise again amid bullish KOSPI Stock-leveraged investments rise again amid bullish KOSPI
8Korea-US defense talks likely to bring up extended deterrence Korea-US defense talks likely to bring up extended deterrence
9Seoul mayor accuses liberals of leading nation in wrong direction Seoul mayor accuses liberals of leading nation in wrong direction
10NK slams NATO chief's Seoul visit as 'prelude to war'NK slams NATO chief's Seoul visit as 'prelude to war'
Top 5 Entertainment News
1Song Joong-ki marries British woman, expects babySong Joong-ki marries British woman, expects baby
2Kim Jung-hyun returns to small screen with 'Kokdu: Season of Deity' Kim Jung-hyun returns to small screen with 'Kokdu: Season of Deity'
3'Someday or One Day' cast says film spin-off has new plot 'Someday or One Day' cast says film spin-off has new plot
4K-pop releases for February K-pop releases for February
5Itaewon music fest brings love to the healing process Itaewon music fest brings love to the healing process
DARKROOM
  • Nepal plane crash

    Nepal plane crash

  • Brazil capital uprising

    Brazil capital uprising

  • Happy New Year 2023

    Happy New Year 2023

  • World Cup 2022 Final - Argentina vs France

    World Cup 2022 Final - Argentina vs France

  • World Cup 2022 France vs Morocco

    World Cup 2022 France vs Morocco

CEO & Publisher : Oh Young-jin
Digital News Email : webmaster@koreatimes.co.kr
Tel : 02-724-2114
Online newspaper registration No : 서울,아52844
Date of registration : 2020.02.05
Masthead : The Korea Times
Copyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.
  • About Us
  • Introduction
  • History
  • Contact Us
  • Products & Services
  • Subscribe
  • E-paper
  • RSS Service
  • Content Sales
  • Site Map
  • Policy
  • Code of Ethics
  • Ombudsman
  • Privacy Statement
  • Terms of Service
  • Copyright Policy
  • Family Site
  • Hankook Ilbo
  • Dongwha Group