http://www.asianage.com/opinion/oped/160517/moons-seoul-to-take-a-softer-line.html

Moon’s Seoul to take a softer line

Skand Tayal
The writer has served as India’s ambassador to Uzbekistan and South Korea

Published : May 16, 2017, 12:10 am IST Updated : May 16, 2017, 12:10 am IST

Moon served as a respected human rights lawyer in the difficult days
of authoritarian rule in the 1980s.

Newly elected South Korean President Moon Jae-in speaks during his
inauguration ceremony at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea.
(Photo: AP)
 Newly elected South Korean President Moon Jae-in speaks during his
inauguration ceremony at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea.
(Photo: AP)
The train of events in South Korea that led to the impeachment of
President Park Geun-hye came to a denouement on May 9 with the
election of a new President. The consistent frontrunner in the race
and eventual winner was left- leaning Democratic Party of Korea’s
candidate Moon Jae-in. He led in all the opinion polls and finally
received 41.1 per cent of the votes.

The other two serious candidates were Ahn Cheol-soo of the centrist
People's Party, who secured 21.4 per cent votes, and Hong Joon-pyo of
the ultra-conservative Liberty Party, who received 25.5 per cent
votes.

Mr Moon, 64, is a person of resolute will and principles. During
military service in 1976, he was involved in a daring commando
operation in the demilitarised zone between North and South Korea. He
served as a respected human rights lawyer in the difficult days of
authoritarian rule in the 1980s. He was chief of staff of late liberal
President Roh Moo-hyun and has rich experience in dealing with complex
governance issues. In 2012, Mr Moon had lost the presidential race to
Ms Park with a narrow margin of 48 per cent against 51 per cent. In
the presidential campaign, Mr Moon presented himself as a champion of
democracy and an advocate of a fair and just society. His campaign
slogan was:  “A reliable President to build a decent nation”.

The rightists were on a sticky wicket in the presidential election due
to the impeachment of President Park Geun-hye and the anti-incumbency
factor, as her predecessor Lee Myung-bak too was from the rightist
Saenuri Party. In the South Korean polity, voters in the 50-plus age
range tend to be more conservative and the young and middle-aged
incline to be more liberal in their social, economic and political
beliefs.

In the second place came 62-year-old Hong Joon-pyo of the Liberty
Korea Party, who represented the hard conservative section of the
South Korean polity. He was governor of the industrialised South
Gyeongsang province and has been a tough public prosecutor. Mr Hong
promised a hard line towards North Korea, revival of death penalty and
a crackdown on trade union leaders who he had accused of shackling the
economy. He was clearly out of touch with the public sentiment.

In the third place was a relatively recent entrant to politics:
55-year-old Ahn Cheol-soo, who has been a successful doctor and
software entrepreneur. He founded the People’s Party earlier this year
after breaking away from the Democratic Party of Korea, once he
realised that he was unlikely to be its presidential candidate. It was
a bitter parting as in the 2012 elections, Mr Ahn had withdrawn in
favour of Moon Jae-in so as not to split the liberal vote.

Prior to the election, Time magazine had correctly predicted that Mr
Moon would be the next President of South Korea and put him on its
cover in the week preceding the election. In his interview to the
magazine, candidate Moon said that his destiny was to bring the two
Koreas together after seven decades of being apart. This goal reflects
the dream of his mentor former President Roh Moo-hyun, who tried his
utmost for reconciliation with the North. He continued the “Sunshine
Policy” of President Kim Dae-jung and had a summit meeting with then
North Korean supremo Kim Jong-il in October 2007. After the election,
Mr Roh said that he was open to visiting North Korea under the “right
conditions”.

With the latest missile test on Sunday, Kim Jong-un has signalled that
North Korea would press on with its policy of defying the UN Security
Council and the United States. President Roh Moo-hyun condemned the
launch as a “provocation” and said that dialogue was “only possible
when the North shows a change in attitude”.

What is still likely is that after a complete failure of the “trust
politik” of President Park Geun-hye and a policy based on strict
reciprocity followed by President Lee Myung-bak, South Korea may again
embark on a policy of unilateral concessions to the North. During the
last two conservative presidencies there was a virtual freeze on any
credible direct contact between the two Koreas. In its recent remarks,
the North Korean official media has favoured a return to the earlier
era of communication and cooperation followed by the two left-leaning
Presidents during 1998-2007.

In his Time interview candidate Mr Moon had also referred to the
rushed installation of the THAAD anti-missile system on South Korean
soil. Reflecting the widespread liberal sentiment, he said: “It is not
desirable for the (transitional) South Korean government to deploy
THAAD hastily at this politically sensitive time with the presidential
election approaching and without going through the democratic process,
and environmental assessment or a public hearing (emphasis added).”

In his inaugural address, President Moon Jae-in declared that he would
“strengthen the South Korea-US alliance while seriously negotiating
with the US and China to resolve the THAAD” issue. In his telephone
conversation with President Xi Jinping, President Moon Jae-in
reportedly said that the “THAAD issue can be resolved when there is no
further provocation by North Korea” and added that “the resolution of
the North Korean nuclear issue must be comprehensive and sequential
with pressure and sanctions used in parallel with negotiations.”

President Moon has inherited a rocky relationship with Japan, which
would need to be repaired. He took the first significant step by
having a telephonic talk with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe after taking
office. The left-of-centre President Moon is expected to walk a fine
line between South Korea’s traditional security provider, the US, and
the new giant in the neighbourhood, China. Both Mr Donald Trump and Mr
Xi Jinping have invited Mr Jae-in for early summits. Reportedly,
President Moon Jae-in will first send special envoys to Washington,
Beijing and Tokyo to kickstart serious diplomatic contacts that have
been in limbo since President Park Geun-hye came under a cloud.

The immediate foreign policy challenge for the new South Korean
President would be to forge a relationship of openness and trust with
the Trump administration so that South Korea does not remain a mere
pawn in the high stakes contest between the US and North Korea.
Because what President Trump is gambling with is the very survival of
Seoul.

For India, the election of the new President is good news. India-ROK
relations had got a qualitative boost after the 2004 visit of
President Roh Moo-hyun to India. Mr Moon was President Roh Moo-hyun's
chief of staff and is likely to continue on the road to consolidate
the “special strategic partnership” between the third and fourth
largest economies of Asia.



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Peace Is Doable

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