- South Korea–United States relations
South Korea–United States relations have been most extensive since 1948, when the
United States helped establish democracy inSouth Korea and fought on itsUN -sponsored side in theKorean War (1950–1953). During the subsequent four decades, South Korea experienced tremendous economic, political and military growth, and reduced US dependency. Since the late 1980s, the country has instead sought to establish an American partnership, which has made theSeoul -Washington relationship subject to some strains.Historical background
In the mid-19th century Korea closed its borders to Western trade. In the
General Sherman Incident , Korean forces attacked a US gunboat sent to negotiate a trade treaty and killed its crew, after it defied instructions from Korean officials. A US retribution attack, theSinmiyangyo , followed.Korea and the US ultimately established trade relations in 1882. Relations soured again when the US negotiated peace in the
Russo-Japanese War . In 1905,Japan persuaded the US to accept Korea as part of Japan'ssphere of influence , and the US did not protest when Japan annexed Korea five years later. Korean nationalists petitioned the US to support their cause at theVersailles Treaty conference underWoodrow Wilson 's principle of national self-determination, without success.The US divided Korea after
World War II along the 38th parallel, intending it as a temporary measure. However, the breakdown of relations between the US andUSSR prevented a reunification.Trade
In late 1980s, the United States was South Korea's largest and most important trading partner. South Korea was the seventh-largest
market for US goods and the second-largest market for its agricultural products. A Korean trade surplus represented the evolving imbalance between the countries. Although Seoul gave in to Washington's demands to avoid being designated as a "Priority Foreign Country ", economic policymakers in Seoul resented this unilateral threat. They also feared that the PFC designation would fuelanti-Americanism throughout South Korea.Free Trade Agreement
The two nations began negotiations on a
U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement in 2006 and reached an agreement in April 2007. It is analyzed by some experts that the presidentRoh Moo-hyun decided to launch on the FTA with US not just to boost economy, but rather, to tighten friendlier relationship with US, which arguably had been impaired by series of disagreements on, among others, how to deal with North Korean nuclear weapons.ecurity
Diplomats in both countries maintained that US forces should remain in South Korea as long as Seoul wanted them. Not only did 94 percent of South Koreans (at its highest) support the presence of the forces, but even the vocal opposition parties favoured a continued US military presence in South Korea. Stability in the
peninsula , they argued, had been maintained because strong Seoul-Washington military cooperation deterred further aggression.Other policymakers felt that American troops should gradually be leaving the country. They argued that South Korea in the late 1980s was more capable of coping with
North Korea which has a far smaller economy. In Washington, meanwhile, an increasing number of United States politicians advocated troop withdrawal forbudget ary reasons. The consultations on restructuring the Washington-Seoul security relationship held duringSecretary of Defense Dick Cheney 's February 1990 visit to South Korea marked the beginning of the change in status of US forces - from a leading to a supporting role in the country's defense.See also
*
List of Korea-related topics
*Politics of South Korea
*Foreign relations of South Korea
*Foreign relations of the United States
*North Korean-American relations
*U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement References
External links
* [http://countrystudies.us/south-korea/76.htm countrystudies.us]
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