Korean security in a changing East Asia

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Korean security in a changing East Asia

edited by Terence Roehrig, Jungmin Seo, and Uk Heo

(PSI reports)

Praeger Security International, 2007

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Since its partition in the 1950s, the Korean peninsula has directly or indirectly shaped the broader security relations between regional powerhouses, and the recent test of a nuclear weapon by the North Korean regime has heightened tensions across the world. This study draws upon contributions from a diverse array of experts who offer their perspectives on the region's complex network of alliances and hostilities. The authors discuss the future of the region, the potential for military conflict and a new arms race, and the ways to maintain peace and stability. Since its partition in the 1950s, the Korean peninsula has directly or indirectly shaped the broader security relations between regional powerhouses, while the recent test of a nuclear weapon by the North Korean regime has heightened tensions across the world. Japan, feeling increasingly threatened by the North Korean regime and China's extravagant military expenditures, has begun questioning Article IX in its Constitution that renounces war and the maintenance of armed forces. Its neighbors, still haunted by Japanese atrocities during World War II, are fearful of a new nuclear arms race in the region. The United States, for its part, has adopted unprecedented hard-line policies in response to 9/11, going so far as to condemn North Korea as part of an axis of evil. It has strengthened its alliance with Japan and alienated its long-time strategic partner South Korea. Add to this the economic entanglements of each of these countries both with each other and with the rest of the world, and the regional security issues become even more paramount. This study makes sense of these complex alliances and frictions and offers an array of perspectives on the future of the region, the potential for military conflict and a new arms race, and the ways to maintain peace and stability. Topics include big power rivalries, South Korea's sunshine policy, anti-Americanism, and emerging nationalisms.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 1 Introduction Terence Roehrig, Jungmin Seo, and Uk Heo Part I: North Korea 2 The Role of the United States in the North Korean Nuclear Crisis Patrick M. Morgan 3 China's Grand Strategy, the Korean Nuclear Crisis, and the Six-Party Talks Shale Horowitz and Min Ye 4 Causes and Consequences of North-South Cooperation David C. Kang 5 Regime Change in North Korea? Kyung-Ae Park Part II: Changing Security Environment in East Asia 6 Korean Security and Big Power Rivalry Terence Roehrig 7 Internal Dynamics of Chinese Nationalism and Northeast Asian Regional Order Jungmin Seo 8 Russian Foreign Policy and South Korean Security Esook Yoon 9 A Modest Proposal: Forming a Regularized Security Structure for Northeast Asia—Drawing on the OSCE Experience Thomas A. Wuchte Part III: Shifting U.S.-South Korea Relationship 10 Allies under Strain: U.S.-Korean Relations under G. W. Bush Seung-Ho Joo 11 Changing National Identity and Security Perception in South Korea Uk Heo and Jung-Yeop Woo Index About the Editors and Contributors

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