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April 16, 2008 - Shorenstein APARC, KSP Op-ed

Shorenstein APARC Distinguished Fellow Michael Armacost discusses U.S.-South Korea ties and points out challenges ahead. "From free trade to North Korea's nuclear threat," writes Armacost in the Christian Science Monitor, "both sides must move past years of missteps."

New Hope for U.S.-South Korea Ties

Appeared in Christian Science Monitor, April 17, 2008

Michael H. Armacost - Stanford University

The visit this week of South Korea's new president, Lee Myung Bak, offers a rare opportunity to put the American-Korean relationship back on a more solid footing. President Lee, who won a decisive victory in last December's election, has expressed views on the security alliance, a bilateral free trade agreement, and policy toward North Korea that are thoroughly compatible with US interests. And Mr. Lee's authority was bolstered by his party's substantial victory in legislative elections April 9.

The question is whether Washington is poised to take advantage of this convergence of views.

For the past eight years, a major perception gap between Seoul and Washington has been painfully evident. Our governments often worked at cross-purposes in the six-party talks to denuclearize North Korea. Progressive governments in South Korea encouraged peaceful coexistence with the North through a pattern of unreciprocated engagement. For much of that time, the Bush administration sought to isolate and pressure Pyongyang into relinquishing its nuclear ambitions, and it made little effort to conceal its hopes for a regime change in Pyongyang.

To read more, please visit the link Christian Science Monitor: New Hope for U.S.-South Korea Ties.

Michael Armacost, the Shorenstein Distinguished Fellow at Stanford's Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, served as undersecretary of State for political affairs and as ambassador to Japan and the Philippines.