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China wins war against South Korea's US THAAD missile shield without firing a shot

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CHINA WINS ITS WAR AGAINST SOUTH KOREA’S US THAAD MISSILE SHIELD – WITHOUT FIRING A SHOT

71276366-cacb-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_4000x1584_220417.JPG




A detente between China and South Korea may be good news for the Korean economy and a necessary step towards resolving the North Korea issue, but at the same time it threatens to degrade regional security for years to come.

When South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Chinese President Xi Jinpingagreed on November 11 to “normalise exchanges”, they ended a conflict that began more than a year ago with Seoul and Washington’s decision to deploy an anti-ballistic missile system in South Korea.

Beyond THAAD: the real reason why China is angry with South Korea
Beijing, which claims the system’s radar can be used by the United States to spy on China, retaliated against the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system with unofficial sanctions against the South. Seoul has now agreed to accept military constraints in return for the lifting of those sanctions, creating a worrying precedent for Beijing’s rivals in the region.

3b685492-cac6-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.JPG
South Korean protesters try to block two US military vehicles hauling THAAD missile defence systems in Seongju. Photo: EPA

The military constraints are known as the “three nos”, meaning Seoul agrees there will be no further anti-ballistic missile systems in Korea, no joining of a region-wide US missile defence system and no military alliance involving Korea, the US and Japan. This is an enormous sacrifice but for reasons both economic and political Moon had few other options.

Economically, after being suffocated for 16 months by China’s “doghouse diplomacy”, many South Korean businesses were left gasping for air. Hyundai’s sales in China dropped 64 per cent in the second quarter of 2017 from a year before, Lotte’s supermarket sales in China fell 95 per cent over the same period and Chinese tour groups to South Korea were banned outright, which alone led to an estimated revenue loss of US$15.6 billion this year, according to Hyundai Research Institute.

Seoul wants THAAD, but do Koreans?
Politically, a better strategy might have been playing both ends against the middle by fostering better ties with Japan and the US but this would have alienated Moon from his base and may not even be something he wants at the moment.

“Moon Jae-in is on the political left, which tends to believe ‘the enemy of my enemy is my friend’, so they dislike Japan and feel closer to China for historical and political reasons,” said Joseph E. Yi, associate professor of political science and international studies at Hanyang University. “The left-wing in Korea is very anti-Japan and has a post-colonial outlook, seeing China and Korea as opponents of Japanese colonialism.”

WATCH: South Korea’s Moon takes presidency of divided country
It all depends, Yi said, on how one views the past. If Koreans view themselves and Chinese as victims of Japanese oppression, they will be more likely to sympathise with China. But, he noted, the problem with this perspective is that Japan today is not the country it was 60 or 70 years ago – neither is China.

As such, Korea and Japan are arguably better allies, according to the political philosophy of liberalism, which suggests liberal democracies should ally against non-liberal states because whatever their differences, their goals ultimately overlap.

China’s economic retaliation is an example of this, since it constitutes a violation of its free trade agreement with Korea, whereas Japan, which also has a free trade agreement with Korea, has honoured its part of the deal.

But liberalism is the philosophy of Korea’s political right, while its political left is defined by social constructivism, or the theory that decisions and knowledge are based not on liberal like-mindedness or realpolitik, but on certain narratives.

President Donald Trump embraces Lee Yong-soo, a former 'comfort woman' who was forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s military during the second world war. Photo: EPA

“If you see Japan as an unrepentant, evil colonial power then you’d rather ally with China against Japan,” Yi said. “So when Moon met [US President Donald] Trump, instead of trying to develop a stronger alliance between Korea, Japan and China, Moon introduced a comfort woman, and they had Dokdo shrimp.”

Comfort women is the euphemism given to the tens of thousands of Korean women forced to work as sex slaves in Japanese brothels during the second world war; Dokdo shrimp are caught in waters around islets at the centre of a territorial dispute between South Korea and Japan – Tokyo lodged a protest about both issues after the Trump visit.

Dear Trump, North Korea tortured me but please don’t attack it
“[Moon is] focused on redemption against the past,” Yi said. “He wants the Japanese prime minister to apologise, and I think this kind of focus on the past shapes politics in an unhealthy way.

“The ‘three nos’ creates a precedent that links economics to political and national security. Korea would never do that if it was any other country, like Vietnam or Japan, but they’re doing it for China because the only other way is to ally with Japan and that’s not an option for the left.”

1b8b0f0e-cac4-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.jpg
South Korean actress Jun Ji-hyun, centre. Photo: AFP

Already, however, the first signs of an economic thaw are visible. Two days after Moon and Xi’s agreement, South Korean actress Jun Ji-hyun appeared in an ad for health products on China’s biggest online shopping website, Taobao by Alibaba, the owner of the South China Morning Post.

Also, during their November 11 summit in Vietnam, Moon and Xi agreed that Moon would visit China in December, and Moon invited Xi to attend the upcoming Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. During the same trip, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe suggested he and Xi visit each other next year to mark the 40th anniversary of their nations’ friendship treaty.

7d47cc8c-cac4-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.JPG
Chinese President Xi Jinping gives his epic speech to the 19th National Congress. Photo: Reuters

This raises further questions about China’s efforts to isolate Japan and constrain South Korea’s military options. According to Donald K. Emmerson, director of the Southeast Asia programme at Stanford University, China’s 19th National Congress, which was held from October 18-24, provides some answers. For one thing, the recent congress has further cemented Xi’s hold on power. That shift, Emmerson said, coupled with China’s economic means, provides Beijing the capacity for expansion. So capacity is there, what about desire?

Xi opened the congress with a speech that lasted more than three hours, in which he said China had entered a “new period” and must now “take centre-stage in the world”. Emmerson said this language suggested that while Beijing’s expansionist ambitions might not extend to Europe, “China wants dominance in its immediate periphery”.

The South China Sea, for example, is administered in domestic Chinese law through the province of Hainan, which means Beijing sees most of the South China Sea as a Chinese lake. Subsequently, when former Philippine president Benigno Aquino filed a suit against China at the United Nations, China refused to take part and denounced the tribunal’s decision, which was not in China’s favour. China then blocked fruit exports from the Philippines and discouraged tourists from visiting.

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“China was furious,” Emmerson said. “They denounced the Philippines and punished it economically, kind of an equivalent to what happened to Lotte in [China] after the THAAD incident in South Korea. The idea is to do economic damage until the state in question behaves properly, according to Beijing.” ■
 
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CHINA WINS ITS WAR AGAINST SOUTH KOREA’S US THAAD MISSILE SHIELD – WITHOUT FIRING A SHOT

71276366-cacb-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_4000x1584_220417.JPG




A detente between China and South Korea may be good news for the Korean economy and a necessary step towards resolving the North Korea issue, but at the same time it threatens to degrade regional security for years to come.

When South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Chinese President Xi Jinpingagreed on November 11 to “normalise exchanges”, they ended a conflict that began more than a year ago with Seoul and Washington’s decision to deploy an anti-ballistic missile system in South Korea.

Beyond THAAD: the real reason why China is angry with South Korea
Beijing, which claims the system’s radar can be used by the United States to spy on China, retaliated against the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system with unofficial sanctions against the South. Seoul has now agreed to accept military constraints in return for the lifting of those sanctions, creating a worrying precedent for Beijing’s rivals in the region.

3b685492-cac6-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.JPG
South Korean protesters try to block two US military vehicles hauling THAAD missile defence systems in Seongju. Photo: EPA

The military constraints are known as the “three nos”, meaning Seoul agrees there will be no further anti-ballistic missile systems in Korea, no joining of a region-wide US missile defence system and no military alliance involving Korea, the US and Japan. This is an enormous sacrifice but for reasons both economic and political Moon had few other options.

Economically, after being suffocated for 16 months by China’s “doghouse diplomacy”, many South Korean businesses were left gasping for air. Hyundai’s sales in China dropped 64 per cent in the second quarter of 2017 from a year before, Lotte’s supermarket sales in China fell 95 per cent over the same period and Chinese tour groups to South Korea were banned outright, which alone led to an estimated revenue loss of US$15.6 billion this year, according to Hyundai Research Institute.

Seoul wants THAAD, but do Koreans?
Politically, a better strategy might have been playing both ends against the middle by fostering better ties with Japan and the US but this would have alienated Moon from his base and may not even be something he wants at the moment.

“Moon Jae-in is on the political left, which tends to believe ‘the enemy of my enemy is my friend’, so they dislike Japan and feel closer to China for historical and political reasons,” said Joseph E. Yi, associate professor of political science and international studies at Hanyang University. “The left-wing in Korea is very anti-Japan and has a post-colonial outlook, seeing China and Korea as opponents of Japanese colonialism.”

WATCH: South Korea’s Moon takes presidency of divided country
It all depends, Yi said, on how one views the past. If Koreans view themselves and Chinese as victims of Japanese oppression, they will be more likely to sympathise with China. But, he noted, the problem with this perspective is that Japan today is not the country it was 60 or 70 years ago – neither is China.

As such, Korea and Japan are arguably better allies, according to the political philosophy of liberalism, which suggests liberal democracies should ally against non-liberal states because whatever their differences, their goals ultimately overlap.

China’s economic retaliation is an example of this, since it constitutes a violation of its free trade agreement with Korea, whereas Japan, which also has a free trade agreement with Korea, has honoured its part of the deal.

But liberalism is the philosophy of Korea’s political right, while its political left is defined by social constructivism, or the theory that decisions and knowledge are based not on liberal like-mindedness or realpolitik, but on certain narratives.

President Donald Trump embraces Lee Yong-soo, a former 'comfort woman' who was forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s military during the second world war. Photo: EPA

“If you see Japan as an unrepentant, evil colonial power then you’d rather ally with China against Japan,” Yi said. “So when Moon met [US President Donald] Trump, instead of trying to develop a stronger alliance between Korea, Japan and China, Moon introduced a comfort woman, and they had Dokdo shrimp.”

Comfort women is the euphemism given to the tens of thousands of Korean women forced to work as sex slaves in Japanese brothels during the second world war; Dokdo shrimp are caught in waters around islets at the centre of a territorial dispute between South Korea and Japan – Tokyo lodged a protest about both issues after the Trump visit.

Dear Trump, North Korea tortured me but please don’t attack it
“[Moon is] focused on redemption against the past,” Yi said. “He wants the Japanese prime minister to apologise, and I think this kind of focus on the past shapes politics in an unhealthy way.

“The ‘three nos’ creates a precedent that links economics to political and national security. Korea would never do that if it was any other country, like Vietnam or Japan, but they’re doing it for China because the only other way is to ally with Japan and that’s not an option for the left.”

1b8b0f0e-cac4-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.jpg
South Korean actress Jun Ji-hyun, centre. Photo: AFP

Already, however, the first signs of an economic thaw are visible. Two days after Moon and Xi’s agreement, South Korean actress Jun Ji-hyun appeared in an ad for health products on China’s biggest online shopping website, Taobao by Alibaba, the owner of the South China Morning Post.

Also, during their November 11 summit in Vietnam, Moon and Xi agreed that Moon would visit China in December, and Moon invited Xi to attend the upcoming Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. During the same trip, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe suggested he and Xi visit each other next year to mark the 40th anniversary of their nations’ friendship treaty.

7d47cc8c-cac4-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.JPG
Chinese President Xi Jinping gives his epic speech to the 19th National Congress. Photo: Reuters

This raises further questions about China’s efforts to isolate Japan and constrain South Korea’s military options. According to Donald K. Emmerson, director of the Southeast Asia programme at Stanford University, China’s 19th National Congress, which was held from October 18-24, provides some answers. For one thing, the recent congress has further cemented Xi’s hold on power. That shift, Emmerson said, coupled with China’s economic means, provides Beijing the capacity for expansion. So capacity is there, what about desire?

Xi opened the congress with a speech that lasted more than three hours, in which he said China had entered a “new period” and must now “take centre-stage in the world”. Emmerson said this language suggested that while Beijing’s expansionist ambitions might not extend to Europe, “China wants dominance in its immediate periphery”.

The South China Sea, for example, is administered in domestic Chinese law through the province of Hainan, which means Beijing sees most of the South China Sea as a Chinese lake. Subsequently, when former Philippine president Benigno Aquino filed a suit against China at the United Nations, China refused to take part and denounced the tribunal’s decision, which was not in China’s favour. China then blocked fruit exports from the Philippines and discouraged tourists from visiting.

RELATED ARTICLES

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Kimchi-making becomes intangible heritage in South Korea


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South Korean hospital hit again for forcing nurses to give political donations


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Kimchi-making becomes intangible heritage in South Korea

“China was furious,” Emmerson said. “They denounced the Philippines and punished it economically, kind of an equivalent to what happened to Lotte in [China] after the THAAD incident in South Korea. The idea is to do economic damage until the state in question behaves properly, according to Beijing.” ■

China uses soft diplomacy and win-win approach yet some media pundits are unhappy.

Would they rather China do exactly what the US militarist regime does at every instance and topple regimes?
 
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Don't Think China wins in this game. I don't even think China was in a favourable position after this

THAAD stays, the talks is for no more FURTHER THAADS system deployed (which refer to the system Moon himself wanted back in July) Not the one that have already deployed in May.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...its-after-north-korea-icbm-test-idUSKBN1AD2ES

Another issue is since Further THAAD was not deployed, China basically push South Korea into buying or eyeing more US equipment, now South Korea wanted Nuclear Sub and Tactical/Strategic Bomber. And more importantly, increased ties with United States (You cannot get those in current situation)

https://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/37776569/s-korea-to-buy-billions-of-dollars-of-us-weapons-trump/

So in the end, THAAD was still deployed (which is what the Trade war started for) and China pushes South Korea further into US Camp and buying more sophisticated weapon from the US and possibly to be used against China had a North/South War started again, I don't see how this is a Chinese Victory...
 
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Ministry encourages strong China-ROK ties
China Daily, November 21, 2017

Beijing has urged Seoul to "continue making tangible efforts" to ensure the stable and healthy development of China-ROK ties, as Republic of Korea Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha begins a visit to China on Tuesday.

At the invitation of Foreign Minister Wang Yi, Kang will visit China through Thursday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said on Monday.

This is the ROK foreign minister's first trip to China as Seoul's top diplomat after assuming the post in June.

During her stay in China, the two sides will exchange views on the current situation and on how to advance and develop relations between China and the ROK, Lu said at a news briefing in Beijing.

Kang's visit comes after President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang separately met with ROK President Moon Jae-in this month on the sidelines of international meetings.

Xi told Moon that China welcomes Kang's visit and that the two countries should boost overall planning on developing their relationship and expanding cooperation in various fields.

Lu said on Monday the two sides should translate into actions the consensus reached by their leaders on improving and developing China-ROK relations.

Beijing and Seoul should enhance mutual political trust and respect each other's core interests and major concerns, Lu said.

The relationship has gone through a record low due to the deployment of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-missile system in the ROK.

Bilateral trade scored $202.2 billion in the first nine months of this year, a year-on-on increase of 11.4 percent, according to Ministry of Commerce.

Zhang Liangui, an expert on Korean studies at the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, said Seoul has worked harder than before in reinforcing economic cooperation with Beijing at a time China still plays a key role in its global trade.

Su Xiaohui, an international strategy researcher at the China Institute of International Studies, said the key to repairing the ties lies in whether the two sides are fully committed to managing their differences and addressing problems.

One of the signals sent by both sides recently is that they expect improved ties, Su said.

As Kang's trip approached, Seoul-based Yonhap News Agency speculated whether Pyongyang had any message to be sent to Seoul via Song Tao, who concluded on Monday a four-day trip to the capital of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea as Xi's special envoy.
 
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Shame, China wins nothing. THAAD was already there, USA wins in this game. it's a good opportunity to deploy THAAD while NK gov is hanging.
 
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Ruling parties of China, DPRK vow to deepen exchanges
Xinhua, November 20, 2017

The ruling parties of China and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) have pledged to strengthen inter-party exchange and coordination, and push forward the development of relations between the two countries.

The pledge was made during a visit to the DPRK by Song Tao, special envoy of the Communist Party of China (CPC) General Secretary Xi Jinping, on Nov. 17-20.

Song, who is also head of the CPC Central Committee's International Department, met and held talks with leaders of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), during which he made a comprehensive notification on the main spirit and historical contribution of the 19th CPC National Congress held last month in Beijing.

The WPK congratulated the CPC on the overall success of its National Congress, and expressed wishes that under the leadership of the CPC Central Committee with Xi at the core, the Chinese people will make tremendous achievements in building a great modern socialist country with Chinese characteristics and realizing the Chinese Dream of great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation.

The two sides also exchanged views on relations between the two parties and the two countries, and on the Korean Peninsula issue and other issues of common concern.

They expressed wishes to strengthen inter-party exchange and coordination and push forward the development of China-DPRK relations.

During his stay in the DPRK, Song also visited some local institutions in Pyongyang and paid homage to the martyrs of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army at a cemetery in Hoechang County, South Phyongan Province of the DPRK.

http://china.org.cn/world/2017-11/20/content_41917695.htm
 
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Uncle Sam is acting like a venomous snake and doesn’t know how to mind its own business. Always meddling and sowing division. Too bad that China is in a different league now. The US is a disgraced nation that has Trump as its commander in chief. That says a lot about Uncle Sam’s position on the world stage today.
 
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China forced Korea del Sur (economic consequences) to kneel down which it did.

Can India do such to China and be one up on it?
Hell no.

If the low income Indians (Modians) do not buy from China than would they buy from Europe?
They have no alternative, only Modi's hawabazi to collect votes.
 
.
Don't Think China wins in this game. I don't even think China was in a favourable position after this

THAAD stays, the talks is for no more FURTHER THAADS system deployed (which refer to the system Moon himself wanted back in July) Not the one that have already deployed in May.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...its-after-north-korea-icbm-test-idUSKBN1AD2ES

Another issue is since Further THAAD was not deployed, China basically push South Korea into buying or eyeing more US equipment, now South Korea wanted Nuclear Sub and Tactical/Strategic Bomber. And more importantly, increased ties with United States (You cannot get those in current situation)

https://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/37776569/s-korea-to-buy-billions-of-dollars-of-us-weapons-trump/

So in the end, THAAD was still deployed (which is what the Trade war started for) and China pushes South Korea further into US Camp and buying more sophisticated weapon from the US and possibly to be used against China had a North/South War started again, I don't see how this is a Chinese Victory...
Partly agree. China didn't win cause THAADS has been deployed. That's solid fact. Another fact is SK has lost Chinese trust and will never win back. Korean Companies won't have a bright future in China whatsoever.
 
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Partly agree. China didn't win cause THAADS has been deployed. That's solid fact. Another fact is SK has lost Chinese trust and will never win back. Korean Companies won't have a bright future in China whatsoever.

Well, I would have agree with you if China did not put up a very large protectionist net against foreign investment.

The big one (like Samsung, Hyundai or Lotte) already have a bleak outlook with product blocking or tax or both for their product in China. Which mean the market they lose is not comparatively big as oppose to in a free-trade world, in fact, China have depending a lot from South Korea than you may think and the hurt is very much both way.
 
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Well, I would have agree with you if China did not put up a very large protectionist net against foreign investment.

The big one (like Samsung, Hyundai or Lotte) already have a bleak outlook with product blocking or tax or both for their product in China. Which mean the market they lose is not comparatively big as oppose to in a free-trade world, in fact, China have depending a lot from South Korea than you may think and the hurt is very much both way.
Wrong. Samsung, Hyundai, Lotte losing market in China is not because of China's government policies. There are two reasons: 1, They can not compete with China's domestic companies( Samsung phone market share dropped very fast even before THADD incident) in free trade environment. 2, Chinese refuse to buy due to the anti-SK emotion.

China depends on some(not a lot) SK products (RAM for example). But the situation will change in near future cause China is building its short boards with huge investments.
 
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CHINA WINS ITS WAR AGAINST SOUTH KOREA’S US THAAD MISSILE SHIELD – WITHOUT FIRING A SHOT

71276366-cacb-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_4000x1584_220417.JPG




A detente between China and South Korea may be good news for the Korean economy and a necessary step towards resolving the North Korea issue, but at the same time it threatens to degrade regional security for years to come.

When South Korean President Moon Jae-in and Chinese President Xi Jinpingagreed on November 11 to “normalise exchanges”, they ended a conflict that began more than a year ago with Seoul and Washington’s decision to deploy an anti-ballistic missile system in South Korea.

Beyond THAAD: the real reason why China is angry with South Korea
Beijing, which claims the system’s radar can be used by the United States to spy on China, retaliated against the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system with unofficial sanctions against the South. Seoul has now agreed to accept military constraints in return for the lifting of those sanctions, creating a worrying precedent for Beijing’s rivals in the region.

3b685492-cac6-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.JPG
South Korean protesters try to block two US military vehicles hauling THAAD missile defence systems in Seongju. Photo: EPA

The military constraints are known as the “three nos”, meaning Seoul agrees there will be no further anti-ballistic missile systems in Korea, no joining of a region-wide US missile defence system and no military alliance involving Korea, the US and Japan. This is an enormous sacrifice but for reasons both economic and political Moon had few other options.

Economically, after being suffocated for 16 months by China’s “doghouse diplomacy”, many South Korean businesses were left gasping for air. Hyundai’s sales in China dropped 64 per cent in the second quarter of 2017 from a year before, Lotte’s supermarket sales in China fell 95 per cent over the same period and Chinese tour groups to South Korea were banned outright, which alone led to an estimated revenue loss of US$15.6 billion this year, according to Hyundai Research Institute.

Seoul wants THAAD, but do Koreans?
Politically, a better strategy might have been playing both ends against the middle by fostering better ties with Japan and the US but this would have alienated Moon from his base and may not even be something he wants at the moment.

“Moon Jae-in is on the political left, which tends to believe ‘the enemy of my enemy is my friend’, so they dislike Japan and feel closer to China for historical and political reasons,” said Joseph E. Yi, associate professor of political science and international studies at Hanyang University. “The left-wing in Korea is very anti-Japan and has a post-colonial outlook, seeing China and Korea as opponents of Japanese colonialism.”

WATCH: South Korea’s Moon takes presidency of divided country
It all depends, Yi said, on how one views the past. If Koreans view themselves and Chinese as victims of Japanese oppression, they will be more likely to sympathise with China. But, he noted, the problem with this perspective is that Japan today is not the country it was 60 or 70 years ago – neither is China.

As such, Korea and Japan are arguably better allies, according to the political philosophy of liberalism, which suggests liberal democracies should ally against non-liberal states because whatever their differences, their goals ultimately overlap.

China’s economic retaliation is an example of this, since it constitutes a violation of its free trade agreement with Korea, whereas Japan, which also has a free trade agreement with Korea, has honoured its part of the deal.

But liberalism is the philosophy of Korea’s political right, while its political left is defined by social constructivism, or the theory that decisions and knowledge are based not on liberal like-mindedness or realpolitik, but on certain narratives.

President Donald Trump embraces Lee Yong-soo, a former 'comfort woman' who was forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s military during the second world war. Photo: EPA

“If you see Japan as an unrepentant, evil colonial power then you’d rather ally with China against Japan,” Yi said. “So when Moon met [US President Donald] Trump, instead of trying to develop a stronger alliance between Korea, Japan and China, Moon introduced a comfort woman, and they had Dokdo shrimp.”

Comfort women is the euphemism given to the tens of thousands of Korean women forced to work as sex slaves in Japanese brothels during the second world war; Dokdo shrimp are caught in waters around islets at the centre of a territorial dispute between South Korea and Japan – Tokyo lodged a protest about both issues after the Trump visit.

Dear Trump, North Korea tortured me but please don’t attack it
“[Moon is] focused on redemption against the past,” Yi said. “He wants the Japanese prime minister to apologise, and I think this kind of focus on the past shapes politics in an unhealthy way.

“The ‘three nos’ creates a precedent that links economics to political and national security. Korea would never do that if it was any other country, like Vietnam or Japan, but they’re doing it for China because the only other way is to ally with Japan and that’s not an option for the left.”

1b8b0f0e-cac4-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.jpg
South Korean actress Jun Ji-hyun, centre. Photo: AFP

Already, however, the first signs of an economic thaw are visible. Two days after Moon and Xi’s agreement, South Korean actress Jun Ji-hyun appeared in an ad for health products on China’s biggest online shopping website, Taobao by Alibaba, the owner of the South China Morning Post.

Also, during their November 11 summit in Vietnam, Moon and Xi agreed that Moon would visit China in December, and Moon invited Xi to attend the upcoming Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. During the same trip, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe suggested he and Xi visit each other next year to mark the 40th anniversary of their nations’ friendship treaty.

7d47cc8c-cac4-11e7-9743-ef57fdb29dbc_1320x770_220417.JPG
Chinese President Xi Jinping gives his epic speech to the 19th National Congress. Photo: Reuters

This raises further questions about China’s efforts to isolate Japan and constrain South Korea’s military options. According to Donald K. Emmerson, director of the Southeast Asia programme at Stanford University, China’s 19th National Congress, which was held from October 18-24, provides some answers. For one thing, the recent congress has further cemented Xi’s hold on power. That shift, Emmerson said, coupled with China’s economic means, provides Beijing the capacity for expansion. So capacity is there, what about desire?

Xi opened the congress with a speech that lasted more than three hours, in which he said China had entered a “new period” and must now “take centre-stage in the world”. Emmerson said this language suggested that while Beijing’s expansionist ambitions might not extend to Europe, “China wants dominance in its immediate periphery”.

The South China Sea, for example, is administered in domestic Chinese law through the province of Hainan, which means Beijing sees most of the South China Sea as a Chinese lake. Subsequently, when former Philippine president Benigno Aquino filed a suit against China at the United Nations, China refused to take part and denounced the tribunal’s decision, which was not in China’s favour. China then blocked fruit exports from the Philippines and discouraged tourists from visiting.

RELATED ARTICLES

British men sentenced for graffiti on Seoul trains


Kimchi-making becomes intangible heritage in South Korea


North Korea is ‘not just threat to the US’: Seoul says Trump must not launch military strike without consent


South Korean hospital hit again for forcing nurses to give political donations


British men sentenced for graffiti on Seoul trains


Kimchi-making becomes intangible heritage in South Korea

“China was furious,” Emmerson said. “They denounced the Philippines and punished it economically, kind of an equivalent to what happened to Lotte in [China] after the THAAD incident in South Korea. The idea is to do economic damage until the state in question behaves properly, according to Beijing.” ■
What economic sanctions by China? The greedy leaders didn't do shit.
 
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China forced Korea del Sur (economic consequences) to kneel down which it did.

Can India do such to China and be one up on it?
Hell no.

If the low income Indians (Modians) do not buy from China than would they buy from Europe?
They have no alternative, only Modi's hawabazi to collect votes.

How??? THAAD had never been removed from SK...
 
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