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There Isn't Much Hope on North Korea Policy | Opinion

7 0
19.08.2024

The Korean Peninsula, arguably the most heavily militarized region of the world, hasn't seen full-scale conflict since July 27, 1953, when an armistice agreement stopped a three-year war that claimed the lives of millions (including more than 36,000 Americans). But the absence of war doesn't necessarily translate into peace. With a third-generation dictator in Kim Jong Un on one side and a brash conservative South Korean president in Yoon Suk Yeol on the other, decent inter-Korean relations don't stand a chance for the foreseeable future.

It certainly never had a chance this year, which started off with Kim announcing that South Korea will now be referred to as North Korean's "principal enemy." Sure, such a designation isn't exactly surprising given the seven decades of animosity between Pyongyang and Seoul. But it was significant because it demonstrated that North Korea had no intention of offering even minor concessions for the sake of a better relationship. Kim's declaration on New Year's Day that reunification was no longer on Pyongyang's docket was even more important, for it overturned a decades-long North Korea policy that Kim's father and grandfather long advocated for.

Yoon Suk Yeol, hawkish on North Korea issues, wasn't about to extend olive branches either. Rather than beg for a summit meeting like his predecessor, Moon Jae-in, Yoon essentially wrote of dialogue with Pyongyang as a waste of time. In its place, the Yoon........

© Newsweek


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