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Geopolitics

Japan-South Korea: Why Rapprochement Is Not Always A Sign Of Peace

The weight of history, and of this geopolitical moment, is propelling the current visit of Japanese Prime Minister in South Korea. Washington is happy that its alliances are aligning, but that's a sign of how high tensions are running in Asia right now.

Japan-South Korea: Why Rapprochement Is Not Always A Sign Of Peace

Prime Minister Kishida Fumio's official visit to South Korea is the first by a Japanese leader in 11 years.

Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

South Korea and Japan have taken a major step to end a paradox. Indeed, both countries face the same threat, that of a nuclear-armed North Korea. They have the same ally, the United States — and are also uncomfortable neighbors of the Chinese giant.

And yet, they've been separated by the weight of history.

Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio's official visit to South Korea, which began Sunday, is the first by a Japanese leader in 11 years. The visit began at the cemetery of war victims, including those of the anti-Japanese struggle: Japan brutally colonized the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945, and this page of history has never been completely turned.

Korean public opinion is divided on this reconciliation, believing that Tokyo has never truly apologized.


Fumio stated Sunday that he had a "heavy heart" when thinking about the suffering of that time, but he did not make a formal apology. But to South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, it is necessary to overcome this wound from the last century: what brings the two countries together today is more important than what separates them.

Washington's interests

For this to happen, the South Korean president had to overcome an obstacle: a Seoul court ordered Japanese companies to compensate forced laborers during the occupation. But Tokyo is opposed to the ruling, believing that the issue was settled by a treaty in the 1960s.

President Yoon came up with a solution: he created a private fund to handle the compensations. Many Koreans are against this solution, as it exonerates Japan, even if one of the survivors involved in the case has accepted the terms. Although unpopular in South Korea, this solution essentially allowed Kishida's visit to take place.

To see how charged the geopolitical context is, just look at a map.

The United States has worked hard towards this rapprochement, considering it catastrophic for their two main allies in northeast Asia to be at a standoff — both countries are linked to Washington by treaties and host American military bases.

photo of chinese naval personnel standing at attention with a missile destroyer behind them

China's missile destroyer Suzhou returning to a military port in Zhoushan, in the Zhejiang Province

Han Lin/Xinhua/ZUMA

Alignment of alliances

To see how charged the geopolitical context is, just look at a map. North Korea's missile arsenal threatens both South Korea and Japan, which are regularly flown over by Kim Jong-un's missile tests. The proximity of China, which is an obsession of Washington, is also crucial.

One of the consequences of this rapprochement is an agreement, signed in 2016 but never implemented, for the sharing of intelligence between Seoul and Tokyo. It seemed absurd at the time, since both were U.S. allies in a sensitive region.

The United States is thus taking care of its alliances in the Indo-Pacific region, to contain the rise of China, a strategy inherited from the Cold War and brought up-to-date. This area is one of the nerve centers of the global economy, a place of innovation. But it is also one of the most explosive regions of the globe, which makes the alignment of alliances logical. Yet such alignments are not necessarily a sign of peace — often just the contrary.

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Economy

Why India Should Bet On A BRICS Future (And Let G20 Pass On By)

With the G20 in New Delhi around the corner, India risks finding itself the wrong side of history, and end up as an observer and not one of the drivers of a "once in a lifetime" change.

People walking by a conference room at the ​BRICS Summit in Sandton, South Africa on Aug. 24

BRICS Summit in Sandton, South Africa on Aug. 24

Pravin Sawhney

-Analysis-

NEW DELHIIndia may believe it is in strategic competition with China over leadership of the Global South but the recent BRICS meet made it clear who is calling the shots. Watching from afar, the U.S.-led G7 nations could see that China was the key determinant of the summit’s accomplishments and that their own influence over the developing world had diminished substantially.

The biggest unsaid gain made by China was the deft shifting of its global geopolitical game – based on "common prosperity and cooperative security" — from east Asia to the 54-nation African continent. The attendance of some 35 African nations at the Johannesburg summit as South Africa’s invitees, followed by 50 African nations attending the third China-Africa Peace and Security forum in Beijing on Aug. 29 is testimony to the attraction President Xi Jinping’s "Global Development Initiative" (GDI) and "Global Security Initiative" (GSI) hold for the Global South.

The focus of the China-Africa Peace and Security forum was on peacekeeping (most of China’s 2,700+ peacekeepers are in Africa), counterterrorism, cyber security, humanitarian aid and military education.

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