
US Potential Plan To Shift Funds from Military Construction Projects in South Korea Reflects Where US-South Korea Alliance Stands
(South Korea) on 20 March 2019
by Editorial (link to original )
Meanwhile, Washington’s funding diversion attempt clearly shows where the current U.S.-South Korea alliance stands: Fissures have been deepening within it. As a matter of fact, there has been some discord between the two allies regarding South Korea’s deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system, or THAAD, and they have also experienced cognitive dissonance over burden sharing for U.S. troops stationed in the South. In addition, annual joint military exercises between the two countries, which are designed to increase their capability to respond to a variety of military contingencies on the Korean peninsula, have been cancelled, partly due to Trump’s dissatisfaction with its portion of U.S. alliance costs, raising security concerns. The political climate on the Korean peninsula makes it difficult to expect what may come since Trump’s second summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hanoi, Vietnam, ended without a joint agreement.
As the possibility of diplomatic resolution to North Korea’s nuclear threat seems even further away, and the rift between Washington and Seoul over easing pressure and lifting sanctions on Pyongyang has deepened, the relationship between the two allies has deteriorated to its worst levels — it is difficult to find common ground between the two sides on elements of a military alliance, including values and common security interest. Under these circumstances, it is obvious that America’s key alliance will be difficult to maintain.
If the U.S.-South Korea alliance breaks down, the two allies’ biggest challenge of denuclearizing North Korea will be untenable, and this certainly will not help protect U.S. national security as well as that of South Korea. Therefore, it is time for the two sides to put effort into overhauling their decades-long military alliance and closing fissures within it for their own national interest.