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South Korean election reveals deep-seated hostility to Washington
By Peter Symonds
21 December 2002
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The results of the presidential election on December 19 has
confirmed a growing resentment in South Korea over Washingtons
aggressive stance toward North Korea and fears of military conflict
on the peninsula.
Millennium Democratic Party candidate Roh Moo-hyun, who called
for continued dialogue with North Korea and a revision of the
military alliance with the US, defeated his rightwing opponent
Lee Hoi-chang by a margin of 48.9 percent to 46.6 percent. Roh,
who even a month ago appeared to facing an impossible task, polled
strongly among young people, winning 62 percent of the under-30s
vote.
Roh based his campaign on continuing the sunshine policy
of current president Kim Dae-jung that is aimed at restoring links
between the two Koreas and opening up the North as a cheap labour
platform for foreign investors. While extremely cautious in his
statements on the US alliance, he nevertheless declared: I
dont have any anti-American sentiment, but I wont
kowtow to the Americans, either.
Tensions on the Korean peninsula have escalated since October
when, forced into a corner by Washington, Pyongyang admitted to
establishing a secret uranium enrichment program. The Bush administration
responded by cutting off supplies of fuel oil, provided as part
of a 1994 deal under which North Korea agreed to shut down its
existing nuclear reactors. Pyongyang has since announced that
it will restart the reactors and has demanded access to spent
fuel rods that were sealed as part of the deal.
According to conventional electoral wisdom, the conservative
Lee, whose Grand National Party (GNP) has close ties with previous
US-backed military regimes, should have been the beneficiary of
the confrontation between the US and North Korea. Convinced that
he could win by relying on an anti-communist scare campaign, Lee
denounced the sunshine policy as a failure, aligned
himself closely with Washington and insisted that North Korea
dismantle its nuclear program before any talks could take place.
Instead, however, the tide flowed in the opposite direction.
Ordinary South Koreans are justifiably concerned that the Bush
administration, which has branded North Korea as part of an axis
of evil along with Iraq, will use Pyongyangs nuclear
program as the pretext for launching military strikes. Summing
up the mood, one young voter commented to the media: Bush
is a trigger-happy man. We need a leader who can say no when we
think we should say no. Our country has been too subservient to
the United States.
Fears of a possible military conflict went hand in hand with
resentment over Americas continued military presence in
South Korea. Last month a US court martial acquitted two US soldiers
whose armoured vehicle ran over and killed two South Korean schoolgirls
earlier in the year. The decision provoked outrage, as well as
substantial protests demanding the revision of the countrys
Status of Forces Agreement with the US to allow American military
personnel to be tried in South Korean courts. Such was the sentiment
that the conservative Lee was compelled to put in an appearance
at the rallies.
Roh, who capitalised on the anger to win the vote, rapidly
sought to assure Washington, as soon as the election was over,
that there would be no fundamental shift in South Korean-US relations.
In the course of the campaign, he repeatedly disowned his support
in the 1980s for the withdrawal of the 37,000 US troops stationed
in South Korea. Yesterday, following the poll result, Roh declared
his desire to go to Washington to forge a mature relationship
with the US. I will maintain a full cooperation with the
United States to resolve North Koreas nuclear issue and
we [South Korea] would play a leading role [in doing so],
he said.
Roh was not Washingtons preferred choice. But, in an
effort to placate anti-US sentiment in South Korea, the Bush administration
moved quickly to congratulate him and invite him to Washington
for talks at the White House. US Assistant Secretary of State
James Kelly stated that Rohs win was the opportunity to
build an even stronger relationship between our two countries.
Asked about the anti-US tone to Rohs campaign, Kelly declared
that some statements made in the heat of the campaign
might not pan out.
While the Bush administration is no doubt looking to pressure
Roh into line and Roh is more than willing to accommodate, the
logic of the situation may dictate otherwise. The popular hostility
to Washingtons policies will be given further impetus if,
as appears more and more certain, the US launches war against
Iraq. Moreover, sections of the South Korean corporate elite,
who see the sunshine policy as a means for cashing
in on North Koreas cheap labour and raw materials, are at
odds with the Bush administrations bellicose stance towards
Pyongyang. Having campaigned on asserting South Koreas independence,
no matter how tentatively, Roh may be driven to take a tougher
stance than he intended, particularly if support for his administration
starts to slip.
Widespread disaffection
The other significant feature of the election result was the
lowest-ever voter turnoutjust 70.2 percent, down by over
10 percentage points from the 1997 presidential election.
Some commentators have sought to blame the last minute withdrawal
of support for Roh by Chung Mong-joon, son of the founder of the
Hyundai conglomerate, who gained a certain popularity because
of his role in promoting the recent soccer World Cup in South
Korea. Chung withdrew his own candidacy in late November and formed
an alliance with Roh to defeat the conservative Lee. Until then,
Roh had been trailing in the polls, with only 20 percent of the
vote. At the eleventh hour, however, Chung abruptly broke the
arrangement, claiming a remark by Roh on Wednesday called the
US alliance into question.
To attribute the low vote simply to the Chung factor, however,
is to ignore the widespread disaffection within the working class
towards the entire political establishment. Roh has pledged to
continue the economic restructuring measures implemented by Kim
Dae-jung over the last five years at the behest of the International
Monetary Fund. In 1998, Kim, with the backing of the trade unions,
amended the countrys labour laws to undermine the system
of lifelong employment in force in larger corporations. As a result,
unemployment rates climbed, especially among young people.
Kims restructuring policies have resulted in bitter conflicts,
which the administration has ruthlessly suppressed. In April 2001,
for instance, the government sent hundreds of heavily-armed riot
police to smash an occupation of 350 laid-off Daewoo workers43
of whom had to be hospitalised after being severely kicked and
beaten. The police action provoked such an outburst of public
anger that the national police chief was forced to make a humiliating
apology.
A further indication of the hostility to the two major parties
is the increased vote for Democratic Labor Party candidate Kwon
Young-ghil, who won nearly 4 percent, up from 1.2 percent at the
1997 election. In the industrial city of Ulsan, Kwon, a former
leader of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU), received
11.4 percent of the vote. Despite the fact that the KCTU was instrumental
in allowing the 1998 changes to the labour laws, Kwon campaigned
for amendments to make sackings more difficult.
In the course of the presidential campaign, Roh, who built
a reputation as a pro-labour lawyer, promised to introduce
even greater flexibility into the labour market. Despite
the changes to the labour laws made by Kim, business leaders have
complained about restrictions on their ability to sack workers.
Speaking after his win, Roh declared: I think there remain
some rigid factors in the labour market. I will try to remove
any unreasonable hurdles.
He is already under pressure from big business to cut labour
costs and boost the countrys competitiveness. The Korea
Chamber of Commerce and Industry declared: Corporate Korea
now stands at a momentous crossroads, particularly in the face
of serious economic challenges from China. Without the creation
of a new growth momentum, Korea could be overtaken by China in
key industrial sectors in less than five years. Thus, the new
president is required to put his top priority on strengthening
industrial competitiveness and an economic rebound.
At the same time, Roh confronts a hostile parliament. In the
2000 elections, the right-wing GNP was able to capitalise on the
hostility to the Kim Dae-jung administration and currently holds
a majority of 150 in the 272-seat National Assembly. Rohs
own Millenium Democratic Party has only 102 seats. As a result,
the new president-elect will be compelled to reach an agreement
with the GNP to enable parliament to approve the appointment of
a prime minister.
While Roh is not due to be sworn in as president until February,
his honeymoon is not likely to last long. He will rapidly come
under pressure from business and a conservative parliament to
make further inroads into the social position of the working class.
At the same time, he will be treading a fine line with Washington
as the already tense situation on the Korean peninsula continues
to deteriorate.
See Also:
South Korean election dominated by debate
over US alliance
[19 December 2002]
US uses nuclear revelations
to raise tensions on Korean peninsula
[31 October 2002]
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