Saturday 15 March 2025 08:09 GMT

Alarmed By Trump, South Korea Mulls Japan-Style Nuclear Option


(MENAFN- Asia Times) The dramatic clash in the Oval Office between US President Donald trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was a profound shock to South Korea, which could not believe such an assault on an ally was possible.

“It was a very concerning and worrying development,” National Assembly Representative Wi Sung-lac, a former senior diplomat and foreign policy advisor to progressive Democratic Party leader Lee Jae-myung, told me days after the meeting.“Everybody should be careful. We are in a period of uncertainty and unpredictability with the US – on the alliance, on North Korea, on the nuclear issue, on tariffs.”

These views were shared across the aisle.“We expected that things would be different with President Trump – tariffs, protectionism, America First, transactional diplomacy, Ukraine, the Middle East,” said a conservative former senior official.“But the speed and intensity of these changes in US policy has been astounding.”

The entire encounter in the Oval Office was watched by many of my Korean interlocutors and continued to draw media coverage and commentary days afterward. For many, it raised serious questions about the reliability of the commitment of the US security treaty, which was made at the close of the Korean War. Along with the presence of US armed forces, that pact is embodied in the guarantee of extended deterrence – the so-called nuclear umbrella that allows South Korea to balance the threat from North Korea.

The most striking evidence of South Korean alarm over the treatment of allies is the widening discussion of the need to have an independent nuclear arms capability. Conservatives have long advocated that option, but the debate has now moved into progressive circles where prominent voices are calling for South Korea to develop nuclear latency – the capacity to reprocess spent nuclear fuel or enrich uranium to be able to potentially possess fissile material for making bombs.

The Japanese model?

For now, South Korea hopes it can follow the path set by Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and offer Trump concessions ranging from trade, supply chain investment, and cooperation on shipbuilding to promoting South Korea's role as an asset in a confrontation against China.

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