Posted on 12/20/2007 1:00:25 AM PST by bruinbirdman
Early results from South Koreas December 19 presidential election show the conservative front-runner candidate, Lee Myung-bak, winning by a sizeable margin (Korea Times) over his two opponents. Despite allegations that he was involved in a corruption scandal, Lee gained over 50 percent of the total vote. The Financial Times says the landslide represents a clear mandate for policy change in a country that has been dominated by left-wing parties for the past decade.
Specifically, South Koreans seem to have turned on the sunshine policy of presidents Kim Dae-jung and Roh Moo-hyuna policy of engaging North Korea that the Guardian says will face tough opposition now that Lee is in office. An analysis from the Wall Street Journal argues that South Koreas vote could potentially fray ties with Pyongyang, particularly if Lee decides to cut back on South Korean aid to North KoreaM in an attempt to spur more straightforward economic ties.
Taking a tough stance toward Pyongyang was a hallmark of Lees campaign. In the run-up to the election, he said he would be less tolerant (Reuters) of communist North Korea if it fails to give up its nuclear weapons. His conservative Grand National Party seeks greater economic openness from North Korea, as well as concrete evidence that it is disarming its nuclear weapons program. Lee also has said he wants to reinvigorate military cooperation (Economist) with the United States. Forcing modernization of North Koreas economy also resonates as a major goal within the party. North Korea ranks as the worlds least free economy on the Heritage Foundations 2007 Index of Freedom. In an interview, David C. Kang, a professor at Dartmouths Tuck Business School, says North-South economic engagement will be a slow process but could reshape the region economically, particularly if rail traffic is allowed to cross through North Korea.
Support for Lee stemmed in large part from frustration with the current administration of President Roh. Rohs critics claim Seoul has been too soft on North Korea. Writing in the New York Sun, longtime Korea watcher Donald Kirk calls the peace treaty reached at the recent inter-Koeran summit a gimmick by the North to receive enormous quantities of aid while giving very little in return. According to Andy Jackson, a professor at Ansan College in South Korea, the state-run Korean Development Bank estimates the cost of Rohs proposed economic package at over $50 billion. He writes in the Wall Street Journal: It's unlikely that major Korea corporations will want to risk more money in North Korea, despite Seoul's encouragement...That means that either waythrough corporate spending or tax hikesthe South Korean taxpayers would likely foot the bill.
Other South Koreans remain disgruntled about the state of their countrys economy (Thomson Financial). Over the past decade, South Koreas growth rate has fallen to an annual average of 4.4 percent, down from a torrid 8 percent pace for much of the 1990s. While many see the lower rate as a more realistic long-term trajectory, inflation has been on the rise, real estate prices have increased, and income gaps have widened. Lee, the former mayor of Seoul and Hyundais top executive, capitalized on these concerns by pledging 7 per cent economic growth, raising income per capita from the current $18,000 to $40,000, and aiming to make Korea the worlds seventh-largest economy.
What Lee's election might mean for North Korea's denuclearization process remains unclear. According to the February 2007 agreement in the Six-Party Talks, North Korea has until the end of the year to disable its Yongbyon reactor and make a complete declaration of all its nuclear facilities. But Seoul says the North may miss its deadline (Reuters). Don Oberdorfer, chairman of the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University, is optimistic nonetheless. In this interview with CFR.org, he says even with a conservative leader at the helm rapprochement between the two Koreas will go ahead, though it may go a little more slowly than now unless there are some basically North-generated problems.
NOoooo
The South is supposed to support the North regardless of the Norths ignoring diplomatic norms. Despite it the North being a prison state that affords its citizens no rights.
What the hell, just because the pathetic Norths need for food stuffs, fuel assistance and every other aid it can get , it is the North that dictates to the prosperous south.
Engaging? That must be the left's new synonym for surrender. The South's policies to the North over the past 10 years have been nothing more than capitulation after capitulation in exchange for the North building more nukes.
The sad part is, we have another example of this kind of diplomacy going on right now between Israel and the Arabs... except that in exchange for numerous Israeli capitulations, Arabs get to kill and kidnap Israelis with impunity.
I suppose when you compare Israel's capitulation with that of South Korea's, the South actually comes out "ahead."
>> pledging 7 per cent economic growth, raising income per capita from the current $18,000 to $40,000, and aiming to make Korea the worlds seventh-largest economy.
Just imagine a US president campaigning on such specific economic metrics, instead of the fuzzy platitudes they spew. (I guess it’s been done before with “two chickens in every pot” — LOL!)
I wonder what economic knobs and levers the SoKo president can manipulate to deliver on his promise...
The appeasement of North Korea will ease somewhat under this man’s leadership, although he still wants to talk and deal with Crazy Kim up north.
Don’t worry, South Korea’s educational system will continue to produce brainwashed, communist loving idiots regardless of president.
And the older generation that remembers the Korean war and it’s aftereffects will continue to die off.
This is the last, dying gasp of a people before the brainwashed horde takes over.
:-(
“I wonder what economic knobs and levers the SoKo president can manipulate to deliver on his promise...”
They have an excellent education system and a pretty amazing work ethic. Not the pennies per month wages though. I believe they still manufacture a large percentage of the worlds computer chips and also have major ship building facilities.
“This is the last, dying gasp of a people before the brainwashed horde takes over.”
Maybe but I don’t think so. They are certainly brainwashed by their media and don’t like Bush. Their culture is changing a great deal and is becoming very western. I was there 10 years ago and would see crippled people crawling thru the streets begging. A year ago I saw able bodied people plotting on how to qualify for more government hand outs.
Most seem to recognize the liberal/socialist policies have killed their economy. Thats what led to the election results.
If he talks and deals with Crazy Kim in the same way Reagan talked with and dealt with the USSR, then "talking and dealing" won't be bad things at all.
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