South Korea swings closer to Beijing

Politics & Current Affairs

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un applauds during a military parade marking the 105th birth anniversary of the country's founding father, Kim Il Sung, in Pyongyang April 15, 2017. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

Since an unexpected dรฉtenteย between Beijing and Seoul at the end of October, South Korea has continued to seek closer relations with China. Hereโ€™s the latest:

  • South Korean President Moon Jae-in has agreed to visit Beijingย in December, Bloomberg reports, noting that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abeโ€™s proposal to also meet with President Xi Jinping was left unanswered. Moon and Xi met on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Danang, Vietnam.
  • The โ€œtwo countries will strengthen strategic talks on all levelsโ€ and โ€œquickly normalize bilateral exchanges in all sectors,โ€ according to a South Korean presidential spokesman, perย Reuters.
  • Moon and Xi also โ€œagreed on the need to manage the security situationย on the Korean peninsula in a stable wayโ€ after Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un โ€œexchanged war-like threats and insults,โ€ raising tensions last month, Reutersย reports.
  • The South Korean military may also be pivoting toward Beijing, the Nikkei Asian Review findsย (paywall), as it โ€œrejected a U.S. proposal to conduct a trilateral military exercise that would have included participation from Japan…possibly out of concern for relations with China.โ€
  • Moon hopes that the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea can be the โ€œpeace olympics,โ€ย Nikkei further notesย (paywall), and has invited Xi to attend. He โ€œaims to have Chinese President Xi Jinping attend the opening ceremony of the Games โ€” now less than 100 days away โ€” and use this as leverage to persuade North Korea to participate.โ€
  • A Chinese marketing campaignย featuring a South Korean actress further indicates the warming of relations, Reuters reports.