South Korea's Lee Jae Myung Urges Mutual Respect with Allies Amid Frictions

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has called for resolving pending issues with traditional allies through mutual respect and principles. His remarks come amid diplomatic frictions with Washington over intelligence sharing and a data breach. Lee also highlighted the need for expanded self-reliant defence capability, pledging to increase defence spending. He noted the economy's 1.7% growth but warned of external risks from the Middle East war and high oil prices.

Key Points: South Korea's Lee Jae Myung on Resolving Ally Issues

  • South Korea's president calls for mutual respect with allies
  • Remarks come amid US complaints over intelligence handling
  • Lee pledges increased defence spending for self-reliant capability
  • Economy grew 1.7% in Q1, but external risks remain
3 min read

South Korean President says will resolve 'pending issues' with allies through mutual respect

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung emphasizes mutual respect and principles in resolving pending issues with traditional allies, amid diplomatic frictions over intelligence sharing and defence.

"(We) need the wisdom to build healthy, future-oriented relations with traditional allies, while resolving pending issues based on mutual respect, common sense and principles - President Lee Jae Myung"

Seoul, April 28

Issues between close allies should be resolved based on mutual respect and fundamental principles, South Korea's President Lee Jae Myung said Tuesday.

Lee made the remarks during a Cabinet meeting at Cheong Wa Dae, stressing that "cooperation with traditional allies should also be developed."

"(We) need the wisdom to build healthy, future-oriented relations with traditional allies, while resolving pending issues based on mutual respect, common sense and principles," he told the meeting.

"(I) will also devote myself to diplomacy aimed at building genuine friendship with allies, with confidence as a sovereign nation," the president added.

The president did not provide the specific background, but the remarks came amid diplomatic frictions over Washington's reported complaints about Seoul's handling of a massive information breach at Coupang, a US-listed e-commerce firm, and the disclosure by a Seoul minister that Kusong may be a North Korean uranium enrichment site, reports Yonhap news agency.

Earlier reports suggested that Washington has partially suspended information sharing on North Korea's nuclear facilities with Seoul over Unification Minister Chung Dong-young's public reference to Kusong as a uranium enrichment site, which it believes was based on US-shared intelligence.

The minister has repeatedly clarified that his remarks on Kusong were based on publicly available sources, not on any intelligence shared by the US.

President Lee also highlighted the military's expanded self-reliant defence capability, pledging to further increase defence spending to ensure standalone defence power.

The Lee administration seeks to regain wartime operational control of South Korean troops from Washington before its five-year term ends in 2030.

During the 1950-53 Korean War, command authority was transferred to the US side, with only peacetime control returned to Seoul in 1994, while wartime control remains with Washington.

"South Korea's own defence capability, excluding US Forces Korea, is the world's fifth-largest, while its annual defence spending is 1.4 times North Korea's annual gross national product," Lee said, also noting that the country's defence exports are the world's fourth-largest.

"Even now, we have enough capability (to defend ourselves on our own), and, going forward, we will further increase defence expenditure," the president said, highlighting the need to make the public aware of this and not worry about national security.

Noting the country's real gross domestic product grew 1.7 per cent in the first quarter from three months earlier, Lee stressed that the figure is nearly double the earlier estimate and that it marked an "acceleration" of the economic recovery trend that began in the second half of last year.

Still, external economic uncertainties linger due to the prolonged Middle East war, while high oil prices pose risks to the real economy, he said, instructing officials to make all-out efforts to sustain economic growth.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The Coupang breach and uranium enrichment disclosure seem like minor issues. But this is a bigger play - Seoul wants wartime control back by 2030. India should watch closely; we've also been working on self-reliance in defence. If Korea can do it with their tech base, so can we. 🇮🇳
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Vikram M
Honestly, I think Lee is being a bit too optimistic. South Korea's defence spending may be 1.4x North Korea's GNP, but that doesn't account for the nuclear threat. Similarly, India's reliance on foreign arms for too long has left us vulnerable. Wish our leaders would learn from Seoul's push for indigenisation.
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Sarah B
As someone from the West, I find this approach refreshing. The US tends to treat allies as junior partners. Seoul is right to demand respect. India has also faced similar dynamics with Washington over things like the Russia oil deal. Mutual respect is the foundation of any healthy alliance, not just one-sided deference.
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Ananya R
Lee's focus on economic recovery is key - GDP growth of 1.7% in Q1 is good, but high oil prices due to Middle East tensions could hurt. India faces similar challenges. Both nations need to diversify energy sources. And please, can we stop fighting over intelligence? North Korea is the real threat, not each other.
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James A
Reminds me of India's own 'strategic autonomy' doctrine. South Korea showing that

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