With an election days away, the two leading candidates must negotiate pitfalls of a reliance on US for security and on China for trade
When Moon Jae-in, the outgoing president of South Korea, returned home from Washington in May last year, his foreign minister, Chung Eui-yong, rushed to clarify the mention of Taiwan in his joint statement with Joe Biden – a highly sensitive subject for South Korea’s biggest trading partner, China.
“The Taiwan-related expressions [in the joint statement] are ‘very general expressions’,” Chung said a day after the statement was released. As if this clarification was not enough, Chung’s deputy, Choi Jong-gun, added: “China would appreciate the fact that South Korea does not see China as an enemy.”
Continue reading...source https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/mar/07/south-koreas-presidential-candidates-face-balancing-act-amid-rising-anti-china-sentiment
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