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Thursday 26 January 2017 - 08:14

South Korea to enhance China ties to have Beijing end THAAD ‘retaliation’

Story Code : 603642
A Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) interceptor is launched during a test in an undisclosed location, September 10, 2013.
A Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) interceptor is launched during a test in an undisclosed location, September 10, 2013.
Seoul announced last year that it had reached an agreement with Washington to install the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system on South Korean soil, a controversial move that provoked China’s strong opposition.
 
South Korean officials gradually started complaining that their country was being subjected to “indirect” retaliation by China, particularly by Beijing’s rejection of requests made by South Korean carriers to operate charter flights between the two countries. The officials interpreted the move as a reaction to the permission for the deployment of the THAAD.
 
Last week, South Korean Finance Minister Yoo Il-ho said the uncertainties linked to China — the world’s second largest economy and Seoul’s biggest trading partner — could pose a threat to his country, which is Asia’s fourth-largest economy.
 
South Korea’s Ministry of Strategy and Finance is now saying that Seoul will be enhancing communication with Beijing in an attempt to surmount the problem.
 
In a Wednesday statement after a regular government meeting on external economic conditions, the ministry said Seoul was to hold further meetings with the country’s local businesses conducting trade with or in China.
 
It added that authorities would also engage Chinese officials more frequently in international meetings in a bid to pave the way for further expansion in bilateral trade relations between the two Asian countries.
 
China has not explicitly denied that it is taking indirect action against South Korea. Earlier in January, however, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said Beijing had an “open and positive attitude” toward trade ties with Seoul but “this requires a foundation of close friendship.”
 
A senior official with the South Korean Finance Ministry anonymously said on Wednesday that the measures adopted by Beijing could not have come out of “thin air” and that they were so explicitly taken that “it’s on everyone’s minds right now.”
 
Seoul and Washington claim the THAAD missile system, to be deployed later this year, is intended to counter perceived threats posed by the North Korean missile and nuclear programs.
 
China, however, says issues with North Korea should be resolved through dialog, not escalatory military countermeasures such as the deployment of the THAAD. Beijing also fears that the system’s strong radar can penetrate its territory.
 
The announcement of the system’s deployment has also triggered many protests within South Korea itself.
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