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S. Korea to bolster 'future-oriented' cooperation with US on supply chains, technologies in 2022

Dec. 23, 2021 - 11:44 By Yonhap
President Moon Jae-in speaks during a Cabinet meeting at Cheong Wa Dae in Seoul on Tuesday. (Yonhap)
South Korea will expand "future-oriented" cooperation with the United States on supply chains, technologies and other areas next year while reinforcing "conflict prevention" efforts with China, the foreign ministry said Thursday.

The ministry delineated the plans in a written policy report for 2022 to President Moon Jae-in as Seoul seeks to craft an optimal diplomatic strategy amid a hardening Sino-US rivalry on technological primacy, security, trade and other fronts.

Delivered jointly with the unification and defense ministries, the report was the last annual government briefing on diplomatic, security and North Korea policies to Moon before his single, five-year term ends in May.

"We will further expand the horizons of cooperation between South Korea and the US by continuing to push for future-oriented cooperation projects in areas, including public health, climate change, supply chains and cutting-edge technologies," the ministry said.

As part of its "science and technology diplomacy," the South will strengthen strategic cooperation with the US on artificial intelligence, information and communications, quantum technology and space development, the ministry said.

Since the White House summit between Presidents Moon and Joe Biden in May, the allies have moved to broaden their partnership beyond its security focus to cover an array of global issues, such as supply chain resiliency, climate change and infectious diseases.

On China, the ministry said Seoul will seize on the 30th anniversary of the establishment of bilateral ties next year to strengthen high-level exchanges and ramp up efforts to prevent any future conflict with Beijing.

Concerns have persisted that the US efforts to rally its democratic allies against China's growing assertiveness could potentially take a toll on relations between Seoul and Beijing.

Capitalizing on the "Year of Korea-China Cultural Exchanges" from 2021-2022, Seoul hopes to achieve the "full restoration" of the two countries' cultural and people-to-people exchanges, the ministry said.

Bilateral cultural exchanges have been impeded by China's perceived restrictions on Korean entertainment and other industries that came in the wake of Seoul's 2016 decision to host a US anti-missile system.

On diplomacy with Japan, the ministry said Seoul will maintain its "two-track" approach of separating tricky historical issues from its efforts to pursue "practical" cooperation with Tokyo.

The unification ministry, meanwhile, voiced concerns that security uncertainties could deepen if the current impasse on the North stretches into the early part of next year. It vowed to focus on resuming its stalled initiative for lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula.

"We will strive to create an unwavering driving force for peace on the peninsula through comprehensive progress in our efforts for cross-border relations, denuclearization and a peace regime," the ministry said.

The ministry said that it would seek to encourage the North's denuclearization through the proposed declaration of a formal end to the 1950-53 Korean War, which Seoul has pitched as a key trust-building measure to help bring Pyongyang back to dialogue.

To ensure "safe" inter-Korean dialogue in the COVID-19 era, the ministry plans to build a videoconference system for future cross-border talks.

The ministry also reiterated that it would pursue humanitarian cooperation with the North "regardless of political and military situations." To that end, it plans to prioritize pushing for face-to-face or video-linked reunions of the families separated by the Korean War.

In its policy report, the defense ministry stressed a plan to substantially bolster space security capabilities by increasing personnel with expertise, securing a military satellite and expanding related international cooperation.

It also plans to accelerate the process for the envisioned transfer of wartime operational control (OPCON) from Washington to Seoul through the full operational capability (FOC) assessment slated for next year. The FOC assessment is the second part of the three-stage program designed to assess Seoul's capabilities to lead the allies' combined forces.

At the two countries' annual defense ministerial talks expected to take place in October, Seoul hopes to carry out the verification of the FOC assessment results to move the transfer process forward, according to the ministry. (Yonhap)