- Embassy of the United States in Seoul
Infobox Korean name
tablewidth=270
caption=
hangul=서울 주한미국대사관
hanja=서울 駐韓美國大使館
rr=Seoul Ju Han Miguk Daesagwan
mr=Sŏul Chu Han Mikuk Taesakwan|The Embassy of the United States in Seoul is the embassy of the United States in the Republic of Korea (South Korea), in the capital city ofSeoul . Theembassy is charged withdiplomacy andSouth Korea–United States relations . TheUnited States Ambassador to Korea is the head of the diplomatic mission of the United States to South Korea.History
The United States has had diplomatic relations with
Korea , with interruption, since the late 1870s.Relations with nations not aligned with
Qing Dynasty China were more or less unknown and not welcome before that time. As China's power began to seriously wane in the 1800s, and as Japan's power, and increasing industrialization was on the rise, Korea began to make changes and make overtures to other nations.The first
envoy s from the U.S were sent toSeoul by the late 1870s. In 1883 the first Ambassador to theJoseon Dynasty Korea arrived in Seoul and an embassy of sorts began operation. Soon an embassy was run out of the Ambassador's residence, avilla given to the U.S. in 1888 by a Korean royal, located just behind theDeoksugung . This site is still owned by theU.S. government , and is the current site of the Habib House, the officialambassadorial residence of the U.S. Ambassador. The Habib House is built as ahanok (traditional Korean home) in 1974 and is named after AmbassadorPhilip Charles Habib . [http://seoul.usembassy.gov/114_111407.html]The rise of the
Empire of Japan as agreat power began with the Japanese victory over China in theFirst Sino-Japanese War (1895) and victory of Japan over Russia in theRusso-Japanese War (1905). In 1910, Korea entered a period of Japanese rule that ended itsindependence . After this was formalized in theJapan-Korea Annexation Treaty , the U.S. mission in Seoul was shut down.A U.S. embassy was not again established in Korea until the end of
World War II , after the Allied forces defeated the Japanese. American and Soviet forces took control of Korea from the Japanese. The Americans set up a government in Seoul in the South, and while the Soviets set up a government inPyongyang in the north. The U.S. recognized the government in Seoul in 1948, the same yearNorth Korea was recognized by the Soviets.From 1948 the American embassy operated out of a leased
hotel building. When North Korean troops invaded South Korea on June 25, 1950, theKorean War began, and the U.S. Embassy in Seoul was evacuated. Seoul was captured by the North Korean forces by the end of June. It would be retaken by the middle of September that same year by U.S.-ledUnited Nations forces, but was lost again to Chinese and North Korean forces in early 1951. In April 1951, UN forces retook Seoul for good. The Korean War ended in July 1953 instalemate , and the U.S. Embassy was eventually re-opened. It has operated in Seoul continuously since that time.The current
chancery building was built in 1962 and was initially an office for theUnited States Agency for International Development (USAID). Several years later, the building was given to the U.S Embassy. The Chancery has a virtually identical sister building, built at the same time, directly to its north. This building was once also part of the USAID office in Seoul, but was turned over to the South Korean government, which uses it as its office for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.The Chancery is located in the heart of downtown Seoul, in the
Jongno-gu district. It is on the main street leading to the Kyongbok palace, and directly next to several major Korean government agency buildings. At the time of its construction the building was one of the tallest in Seoul and comparatively modern. Today the Chancery building is much too small and antiquated for the embassy's needs.Attempts at building a new Chancery have been in the plans since about 1980, but funding issues by the
United States Congress , botched negotiations with the Korean government, and political wrangling between the U.S. and Korean governments over an appropriate site, have led to the lengthy delay in a new Chancery. In 1986 the U.S. purchased land, the Kyunggi Girls' High School site, near the U.S. Ambassador's residence. This was encouraged by the Korean government at the time, with the idea that this site would be the home to a new Chancery building. Full efforts to build there by the Americans were rebuffed by recently empowered local community groups who believed that construction at that site would disturb buried archaeological evidence, would overshadow the nearbyDeoksugung palace and ruin the aesthetics of the neighborhood. Current plans call for a new Chancery to be built on land to be relinquished by the U.S. Army leaving theYongsan Garrison south of downtown Seoul, but still north of the Han River.Role
The U.S. Embassy in Seoul has traditionally played a key and prominent role in South Korea politics. Issues such as the ever-present danger from North Korea, the presence of U.S. troops in South Korea, and the deference of South Korea to the U.S. have been factors that lead to such importance.
Increasingly the U.S Embassy has been the focus of demonstrations in Seoul. Whenever a controversial issue crops up involving the U.S presence in Korea, a
demonstration will almost invariably occur at the U.S. Embassy. Severalplatoon s of Koreanriot police are always present in front of the U.S. Embassy. In the 1990s, other U.S. diplomatic posts in Korea have been shut down, the last being the Consulate in Pusan in early 1999.Busan (Pusan) Consulate
A
consulate inPusan was closed in 1999, but in February 2007 a Virtual Presence Post was opened in Busan (after 1999 the city changed its romanized spelling). In October 2007, VPP Busan was changed to the status of anAmerican Presence Post , with a resident consul. The APP Busan, which is equivalent to a consulate, is located in a commercialoffice building . APP Busan has no visa issuance section; it reports to and makes all visa issuance referrals to the Embassy in Seoul.External links
* [http://seoul.usembassy.gov Official website]
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