Photo: AFP
Yoon Suk Yeol will arrive in Tokyo on Thursday (local time) hours after North Korea fired a ballistic missile, on the first visit to Japan by a South Korean president in 12 years as he seeks a closer relationship with Tokyo amid a perceived increase in regional threats from North Korea and China.
Yoon will meet Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in the afternoon when the two are expected to present a united front as they seek to put behind years of animosity arising from Japan’s 1910-1945 occupation of the Korean peninsula.
Talks between the two will take place the same day North Korea fired a long-range ballistic missile, which flew into the sea between the Korean peninsula and Japan, bringing into sharp focus the urgency to discuss regional security and North Korea.
The two leaders are also expected to discuss cooperation to secure supply chains.
“There is an increasing need for (South) Korea and Japan to cooperate in this time,” Yoon said in a written interview with international media on Wednesday, calling both North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats and supply chain disruptions a “polycrisis”.
Yoon has said that he expected to “invigorate” security cooperation and the two leaders were preparing to confirm the restart of a bilateral security dialogue, which had been suspended since 2018, according to Japanese broadcaster NHK.
Tokyo and Seoul are also expected to revive “shuttle diplomacy” of regular visits between the leaders, according to a Yomiuri daily report citing Japanese government sources.
Still, Japan remains cautious about immediate improvements in relations, with a Japanese government official who requested anonymity saying that “Japan and South Korea relations are looking up, but it’s still a step-by-step process”.
Yoon also faces skepticism at home. In a poll by Gallup Korea published Friday, 64 percent of respondents said there was no need to rush to improve ties with Japan if there was no change in its attitude, and 85 percent said they thought the current Japanese government was not apologetic about Japan’s colonial history.
Photo: Masanori Genko / Yomiuri / The Yomiuri Shimbun via AFP
Park Hong-keun, floor leader of South Korea’s main opposition Democratic Party, said Yoon’s visit should not stop at “his trip down memory lane” and asked Yoon to earn a true apology and resolution from Japan on forced labour issues during his trip.
Relations between the two countries, which have frayed over disputed islands, wartime labour and Korean “comfort women” forced to work in Japanese wartime brothels, made headway last week when Seoul announced a plan for its companies to compensate former forced labourers.
Kishida welcomed the labour compensation move and spoke of hopes of “bolstering relations” with Yoon’s visit.
The two also met in November on the sidelines of the summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in Cambodia.
South Korea and Japan at the time agreed to exchange real-time intelligence on North Korea’s missile launches, which experts say will help both countries better track potential threats.
Japan said the “strategic challenge posed by China is the biggest Japan has ever faced” in a defence strategy paper released in December. Tokyo says it worries Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has set a precedent that will encourage China to attack self-ruled Taiwan, who the US is stocking up on weapons.
China’s coast guard entered waters around disputed East China Sea islets on Wednesday (local time) to counter what it called the incursion of Japanese vessels into Chinese territorial waters.
-Reuters
Copyright © 2023, Radio New Zealand
The state news agency says the launch tested the underwater offensive operations of submarine units that form part of the country’s nuclear deterrent.
North Korea has fired two ballistic missiles off its east coast, South Korea’s military says.
North Korea said the testing confirmed its readiness for “mobile and mighty counterattack” against hostile forces.
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