Instability in the US-ROK Alliance: Korean Drift or American Shift?
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Taylor, Brendan
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Canberra, ACT: Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, The Australian National University
Abstract
The US-ROK alliance appears to be in a state of decline which many
commentators regard as potentially terminal. The paper attributes
this to Washington’s increasing proclivity to view Pyongyang through
the lens of its global strategy of preventing the proliferation of WMD
technologies and components to rogue states and terrorists groups,
leading to a reduced emphasis on the more specific regional objective
of deterring a North Korean attack against the South. Seoul has sought
to compensate for the heightened sense of insecurity this shift has
generated by pursuing an ‘engagement’ policy toward the North,
while simultaneously undertaking a renewed drive to demonstrate
the continued relevance of the US-ROK alliance and South Korea’s
commitment to it. History suggests that this strategy will serve to
improve South Korea’s relative security position vis-à-vis the DPRK
while still ensuring that the US-ROK alliance remains intact. Yet
there is also little to indicate that it will produce any genuine reduction
in the tensions currently afflicting the relationship. Instead, the paper
concludes that these appear destined to persist for some time, barring
an improbable realignment of America’s global and regional strategic
priorities.
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