South Korea and China look to improve ties after THAAD dispute

South Korean President Moon Jae-in talks of hope for renewed cooperation at summit with Chinese president, Xi Jinping.

China South Korea
In this image from video, South Korean President Moon Jae-in, left, is greeted by his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping ahead of their meeting at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. The leaders of China, Japan and South Korea are holding a trilateral summit in China this week [AP Photo]

The leaders of South Korea and China have said they looked forward to improved ties following a protracted disagreement over the deployment of an anti-missile system by the United States that Beijing considers a threat.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in told Chinese leader Xi Jinping that while each side might have felt “disappointed towards each other for a while”, their shared culture and history prevented them from becoming completely estranged.

“It is hoped that South Korea’s dream becomes helpful for China as China’s dream becomes an opportunity for South Korea,” Moon said in opening remarks on Monday before reporters were ushered from the room.

In his opening comments at the meeting at the Great Hall of the People in the centre of Beijing, Xi described bilateral ties as “a substantial relationship in the world and an influential relationship among world nations”.

Ties between the northeast neighbours deteriorated in 2017 after Seoul accepted the establishment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, system in southern South Korea. Beijing insists the system’s real purpose is to use its powerful radars to peer deep into its territory, rather than to warn of North Korean missile launches and shoot them down.

North Korea question

Furious, China launched an unofficial boycott of everything from Chinese tour group visits to South Korea to South Korean television shows, boy bands and other cultural products.

Major South Korean retailer Lotte, which provided a golf course where the missile system was deployed, was singled out for especially harsh treatment and its China business operations were essentially destroyed. Even sales of ubiquitous South Korean car brands such as Hyundai and Kia plunged.

Ultimately, Beijing was unable to force South Korea to withdraw the system and its fury appears to have subsided somewhat amid the trade war with the US and tensions elsewhere in Asia.

South Korea now hopes to have Xi visit next year and is also anxious to have Beijing use its influence with North Korea to kick-start deadlocked denuclearisation talks.

While South Korea appreciates the part China has played in that effort, the “current recent situations in which the talks between the United States and North Korea are stalled and tensions on the Korean Peninsula have become heightened are certainly not favorable, not only for South Korea and China but also for North Korea,” Moon said in his opening comments.

“I hope that we continue to closely cooperate so that the opportunities we have gained with difficulty can come to fruition,” he said.

North Korea has set a year-end deadline for the US to make concessions in the nuclear talks, without apparently making any offers of its own. The US says it will not accept that demand and has called on North Korea to return to negotiations. While China is the North’s most important diplomatic ally and chief source of investment and economic assistance, its ability to force Kim Jong Un‘s regime to alter policy is believed to be limited.

Along with meeting Xi, Moon will take part on Tuesday in a trilateral summit in the southwest Chinese city of Chengdu with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang.

Source: News Agencies