From
Send to

Next Korean president shouldn't hurriedly seek to reopen Kaesong complex: Victor Cha

April 26, 2017 - 09:23 By a2016032

South Korea's next president shouldn't hurriedly seek softer-line measures toward North Korea, such as reopening a jointly run industrial complex in the North, because it would put Seoul out of sync with the United States, an expert said Tuesday.

"A new South Korean government cannot afford ideological indulgences in a renewed engagement or sunshine policy," Victor Cha, Korea chairman at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing.

(Yonhap)

"It would be unwise, for example, for a new South Korean president on May 10th, presumably in the aftermath of more North Korean provocations and possibly a sixth nuclear test, to declare that he or she is reopening the Kaesong industrial complex," he said.

The factory park, which combines South Korean capital and North Korean labor, used to be a symbol of inter-Korean reconciliation.

South Korea shut down the complex last year in the wake of the North's nuclear and missile tests amid criticism it provides hard currency for the North's weapons program.

Cha said all leading candidates appear to espouse views calling for more engagement with the North.

"They will be in a position where their primary ally, the United States is not of a similar mind. Neither is the partner across the sea, Japan, and arguably China's not in that position, as well," he said. "While I don't think engagement is necessarily completely wrong with North Korea, now is not the time." (Yonhap)