National Trade Data Bank ITEM ID : ST BNOTES SOUTHKOR DATE : Oct 28, 1994 AGENCY : U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE PROGRAM : BACKGROUND NOTES TITLE : Background Notes - SOUTH KOREA Source key : ST Program key : ST BNOTES Update sched. : Occasionally Data type : TEXT End year : 1992 Date of record : 19941018 Keywords 3 : Keywords 3 : | SOUTH KOREA SOUTH KOREA BACKGROUND NOTES (APRIL 1991) PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS US DEPARTMENT OF STATE April 1991 Republic of Korea PROFILE Geography Area: 98,500 sq. km. (38,000 sq. mi.); about the size of Indiana. Cities: Capital--Seoul (10 million). Other major cities--Pusan (3.5 million), Taegu (2 million), Inchon (1.4 million). Terrain: Partially forested mountain ranges separated by deep, narrow valleys; cultivated plains along the coasts, particularly in the west and south. Climate: Temperate. People Nationality: Noun and adjective--Korean(s). Population (1988): 43 million. Annual growth rate: 1%. Ethnic groups: Korean; small Chinese minority. Religions: Buddhism, Christianity, Shamanism, Confucianism. Language: Korean. Education: Years compulsory--6. Number of students--11,182,000. Attendance (1988)--of those eligible, 99% attended middle school, 94% attended high school. Literacy--98%. Health (1987): 1 doctor/1,000 persons. Infant mortality rate (1988)--6/1,000. Life expectancy (1988)--men 67 yrs., women 73 yrs. Work force (17 million, 1988): Agriculture--21%. Industry--28%. Services--50%. Government Type: Republic with powers shared between the president and the legislature. Independence: August 15, 1948. Constitution: July 17, 1948; last revised 1987. Branches: Executive--president (chief of state). Legislative--unicameral National Assembly. Judicial--Supreme Court and appellate courts, Constitutional Court. Subdivisions: 9 provinces, 6 administratively separate cities (Seoul, Pusan, Inchon, Taegu, Kwangju, Taejon). Political parties: Government party--Democratic Liberal Party (DLP). Opposition parties--New Democratic Union (NDU) and Democratic Party (DP). Suffrage: Universal at 20. Central government budget (1991): Expenditures--$38 billion. Defense: $11 billion, about 4% of GNP in real terms and 29% of government budget; about 650,000 troops. Flag: Centered on a white field is the ancient Chinese symbol of yin and yang; at each corner of the white field is a different trigram of black bars. Economy GNP (1990 est.): $224 billion. Annual growth rate (1965-86): 7%; (1986-88): 12%; (1990 est.): 9%. Per capita GNP: $5,500. Consumer price index (1990 avg. increase): 9%. Natural resources: Limited coal, tungsten, iron ore, limestone, kaolinite, and graphite. Agriculture, including forestry and fisheries (9% of 1990 GNP): Products--rice, barley, vegetables. Arable land--22% of land area. Mining and manufacturing (35% of 1990 GNP): Textiles, footwear, electronics, shipbuilding, motor vehicles, petrochemicals, industrial machinery. Trade (1990): Exports--$65 billion: manufactures, textiles, ships, electronics, footwear, steel. Major markets--US, Japan, European Community, Middle East. Imports--$70 billion: crude oil, food, machinery and transportation equipment, chemicals and chemical products, base metals and articles. Major suppliers--Japan, US, Middle East. Official exchange rate (December 1990): 715 won=US$1. Fiscal year: Calendar year. Membership in International Organizations Official observer status at UN; active in many UN specialized agencies (FAO, GATT, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, IDA, IFAD, IFC, IMF, IMO, ITU, UNCTAD, UNDP, UNESCO, UNICEF, UNIDO, UPU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO) and other international organizations (Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Geneva Conventions of 1949 for the Protection of War Victims, Asian Development Bank, INTELSAT, the Administrative Council of the International Telecommunications Council, International Whaling Commission, Interparliamentary Union, INTERPOL); official observer status in African Development Bank (member of Africa Development Fund), International Labor Organization, and Organization of American States. PEOPLE Korea was first populated by a Tungusic branch of the Ural-Altaic family, which migrated to the peninsula from the northwestern regions of Asia. Some also settled parts of northeast China (Manchuria); Koreans and Manchurians still show physical similarities--in their height, for example. Koreans are racially and linguistically homogeneous, with no sizeable indigenous minorities, except Chinese (50,000). South Korea's major population centers are in the northwest area of Seoul-Inchon and in the fertile southern plain. The mountainous central and eastern areas are sparsely inhabited. Between 1925 and 1940, the Japanese colonial administration in Korea concentrated its industrial development efforts in the comparatively underpopulated and resource-rich north, resulting in a considerable migration of people to the north from the southern agrarian provinces. This trend was reversed after World War II, when more than 2 million Koreans moved from the north to the south following the division of the peninsula into US and Soviet military zones of administration. This southward migration continued after the Republic of Korea was established in 1948 and during the Korean war (1950-53). About 10% of the people in the Republic of Korea are of northern origin. With 43 million people, South Korea has one of the world's highest population densities--much higher, for example, than India or Japan--while the territorially larger North has about only 20 million people. Ethnic Koreans now residing in other countries live mostly in China (2.6 million), Japan (700,000), the United States (1.2 million), and the Soviet Union (500,000). Language Korean is a Uralic language, remotely related to Japanese, Hungarian, Finnish, and Mongolian. Although dialects exist, the Korean spoken throughout the peninsula is mutually comprehensible. Chinese characters were used to write Korean before the Korean Hangul alphabet was invented in the 15th century. These characters are still in limited use in South Korea, but the North uses Hangul exclusively. Many older people retain some knowledge of Japanese from the colonial period (1910-45), and most educated Koreans can read English, which is taught in all secondary schools. Religion Korea's traditional religions are Shamanism and Buddhism. Although Buddhism has lost some influence since the 15th century, it still commands the greatest number of adherents of any faith--about 20% of the population. Shamanism (traditional spirit worship) is still practiced in some rural areas. Although Confucianism remains the dominant cultural influence, its religious adherents are few and tend to be elderly. Christian missionaries arrived in Korea in the 19th century and founded schools, hospitals, and other modern institutions throughout the country. Today, nearly 7 million Koreans, or 16% of the population, are Christians (about 78% Protestant)--the largest figure for any East Asian country except the Philippines. There are estimated to be 4 million adherents of Chondogyo, a native religion founded in the mid-19th century that fuses elements of Confucianism and Christianity. HISTORY According to Korean legend, the god-king Tangun founded the Korean nation in BC 2333, after which his descendants reigned over a peaceful kingdom for more than a millennium. By the first century AD, the Korean Peninsula, known as Chosun ("morning calm"), was divided into the kingdoms of Silla, Koguryo, and Paekche. The Silla kingdom unified the peninsula in AD 668. The Koryo dynasty (from which is derived the Western name "Korea") succeeded the Silla kingdom in 935. The Yi dynasty, which supplanted Koryo in 1392, lasted until the Japanese annexed Korea in 1910. Throughout most of its history, Korea has been invaded, influenced, and fought over by its larger neighbors. Korea was under Mongolian occupation from 1231 until the early 14th century and was devastated by a large number of Chinese rebel armies in 1359 and 1361; the Japanese warlord Hideyoshi launched major invasions in 1592 and l597. In the mid-19th century under the Yi kings, Korea adopted a closed-door policy to ward off Western encroachment, earning Korea the name of "Hermit Kingdom." Although the Yi Dynasty paid nominal fealty to the Chinese throne, Korea was, in fact, independent until the late 19th century. At that time, Japanese, Chinese, and Russian competition in Northeast Asia led to armed conflict. Japan defeated its two competitors and established dominance in Korea, formally annexing it in 1910. The Japanese colonial era, which lasted until the end of World War II, was characterized by tight control from Tokyo and ruthless efforts to supplant Korean language and culture. Korean resistance to such colonialism, notably in the 1919 Independence Movement, failed. At the April 1945 Yalta Conference, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to establish a joint trusteeship for Korea. The trusteeship was intended as a temporary administrative measure pending democratic elections of a Korean government. The US proposed--and the Soviet Union agreed--that Japanese forces surrender to US forces south of the 38th parallel and to Soviet forces north of that line. In the north, the Soviets initially transferred the administrative powers of the former Japanese colonial government to "people's committees," and later to a 5-province administrative bureau under the nationalist, Cho Man-Sik. Cho was later purged by the Soviets for opposing the decision of allied foreign ministers at the Moscow Conference in December 1945 for a 5-year trusteeship, during which a Korean provisional government would prepare for full independence. In the south, the US military government in Korea (1945-48), headed by Lt. Gen. John R. Hodge, was marked by uncertainty and an unclear US policy toward Korea. The Moscow conference's decision for a trusteeship also generated a firestorm of protest in South Korea. Trusteeship was unacceptable to nationalist leader Syngman Rhee and other rightist Korean leaders associated with the provisional government established in Shanghai in 1919 by Korean nationalists living abroad. It was also opposed by groups within southern Korea who had established local self-governing bodies after the Japanese surrender. The US military government initially relied on the advice of conservative elements but later tried to put together a moderate coalition to provide it with a broader base of political support. In December 1946, the military government established an interim legislative assembly to draft legislation and appointed moderates to half the seats. (The others were indirectly elected seats that went to rightists.) But the July 1947 assassination of a prominent leftist in the coalition and the decision of a coalition moderate to enter into unification talks with the north led to the demise of the coalition effort. The joint Soviet-American commission provided for by the Moscow conference met intermittently in Seoul but became deadlocked over the issue of free consultations with representatives of all Korean political groups for establish- ment of a national government. The US submitted the Korean question to the UN General Assembly for resolution in September 1947. Korean Conflict The Soviet Union and the Korean authorities in the north ignored the UN General Assembly resolution of November 1947, which called for UN-supervised elections throughout Korea. Elections, nonetheless, were carried out under UN observation in the south, and on August 15, 1948, the Republic of Korea (ROK) was established. Syngman Rhee, became the republic's first president. On September 9, 1948, the Soviet Union established the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) in the north under Kim Il Sung, a former anti-Japanese guerrilla who served with the Soviet Army in the Far East during World War II. Guerrilla fighting between southern and northern forces intensified during 1948-50. During this period, although the US provided modest military aid to the south, it planned and executed a withdrawal of its occupation forces which was completed by June 1949. A year later, on June 25, 1950, North Korean forces invaded South Korea. The UN, in accord with its charter, engaged in its first collective action by establishing the UN Command (UNC), under which 16 member nations sent troops and assistance to South Korea. At the request of the UN Security Council, the United States, which contributed the largest contingent, led this international effort. After initially falling back to the Pusan perimeter, UN forces conducted a successful surprise landing at Inchon and rapidly advanced up the peninsula. As the main UN force approached the Yalu River, large numbers of Chinese "people's volunteers" intervened, forcing UN troops to withdraw south of Seoul. The battle line seesawed back and forth until the late spring of 1951, when a successful offensive by UN forces was halted to enhance ceasefire negotiations prospects. The battle line thereafter stabilized north of Seoul near the 38th parallel. Armistice negotiations began in July 1951, but hostilities continued until July 27, 1953. On that date at Panmunjom, the military commanders of the North Korean Army, the Chinese People's Volunteers, and the UNC signed an armistice agreement. Neither the United States nor South Korea is a signatory of the armistice per se, though both adhere to it through the UNC. No comprehensive peace agreement has replaced the 1953 armistice pact, which remains in force. Thus, a condition of belligerency still exists on the divided peninsula. A Military Armistice Commission (MAC), composed of 10 members, five appointed by each side, supervises implementation of the armistice. In April 1954, an international conference on Korea met in Geneva but ended without agreement or progress after 7 weeks of futile debate. Postwar Developments Syngman Rhee served as president of the Republic of Korea until April 1960, when university students forced him to step down. A caretaker government was established, the constitution was amended, and national elections were held in June. The opposition Democratic Party easily defeated Rhee's Liberals, and the new National Assembly named Chang Myon prime minister in August. Chang's democratic but ineffectual government--the Second Republic--lasted until May 1961, when it was overthrown in an army coup led by Maj. Gen. Park Chung Hee. After 2 years of military government under Park, civilian rule was restored with the advent of the Third Republic in 1963. Park, who had retired from the army, was elected president (and was reelected in 1967, 1971, and 1978). In 1972, a popular referendum approved the Yushin (revitalizing) constitution, greatly strengthening presidential and executive branch powers. Key provisions included indirect election of the president, presidential appointment of one-third of the national assembly, and presidential authority to issue decrees restricting civil liberties in times of national emergency. Park subsequently issued several such decrees; the best-known of these, EM-9, banned discussion of false rumors, criticism of the constitution or advocacy of its reform, and political demonstrations by students. The Park era, marked by rapid industrial modernization and extraordinary economic growth, ended with his assassination in October 1979. Prime Minister Choi Kyu Ha assumed office briefly (the Fourth Republic), promising a new constitution and presidential elections. In December 1979, Maj. Gen. Chun Doo Hwan and close military colleagues removed the army chief of staff and soon effectively controlled the government. University student-led demonstra-tions spread in the spring of 1980. The government declared martial law in mid-May, banned all demonstrations, and arrested many political leaders and dissidents. Special forces units in the city of Kwangju reacted harshly to any who ignored the ban, setting off a confronta-tion which left 200 civilians dead. This incident left a wound that has proven slow to heal. By September 1980, President Choi had been forced to resign, and General Chun, by then retired from the army, was named president. In October 1980, a referendum approved a new constitution, beginning the Fifth Republic. This document retained key features of earlier ones, including a strong executive and indirect election of the president, but limited the chief executive to one 7-year term. Elections were held in early 1981 for a National Assembly and an electoral college; the latter elected President Chun to a 7-year term (1981-1988). Although martial law ended in January 1981, the government retained broad legal powers to control dissent. An active and articulate minority of students, intellectuals, clergy, and others remained critical of the Chun government and demonstrated against it. Demonstrations at Inchon in May 1986 and at Konkuk University in fall 1986 were marred by violence. In April 1986, the president responded to a signature campaign by the opposition New Korea Democratic Party (NKDP), which called for direct election of the next president by amending the constitution. The NKDP soon split into two opposition parties--Kim Dae Jung's Peace and Democracy Party (PPD) and Kim Young Sam's Reunification Democratic Party (RDP). They agreed on eight demands for reform including constitutional revision, repeal or revision of onerous laws, and release of political prisoners. President Chun, who could not succeed himself, pledged in early 1987 that he would step down at the end of his term in February 1988. Chun suspended all discussion of constitutional revision in June 1987, and the ruling Democratic Justice Party approved Chun's hand-picked successor, Roh Tae Woo. Students, and then the general public, took to the streets to protest Chun's suspension of constitutional revision. On June 29, in a surprise move, presidential candidate Roh Tae Woo distanced himself from President Chun by announcing that he would implement democratic reforms if elected. The constitution was revised in October to include direct presidential elections and a strengthened National Assembly consisting of 299 members. In December 1987 Roh Tae Woo won with 37% of the vote in the first direct presidential election since 1971. The two leading opposition leaders, Kim Dae Jung and Kim Young Sam, unable to agree on a single candidate, both ran and lost. Kim Dae Jung, Kim Young Sam, and former prime minister Kim Jong Pil polled 27, 28 and 10%, respectively. The new constitution entered into force in February 1988, when President Roh assumed office. Elections for the national assembly were held on April 26. In a stunning upset, President Roh's ruling Democratic Justice Party (DJP) won only 34% of the popular vote, thereby losing control of the assembly for the first time since 1952. The final count was 125 seats for the DJP, 70 seats for Kim Dae Jung's Party for Peace and Democracy (PPD), 59 seats for Kim Young Sam's Reunification Democratic Party (RDP), 35 seats for Kim Jong Pil's New Democratic Republican Party (NDRP), and 10 for independent candidates. The new opposition-dominated national assembly quickly challenged the president's prerogatives. In July 1988 it turned down President Roh's choice for chief of the Supreme Court. In the fall, the assembly conducted the first government audit in 16 years and began televised hearings into practices and policies of former President Chun's Fifth Republic. By late November, Chun was forced to make a public apology to the nation, turn over his personal wealth to the nation, and go into internal exile in a Buddhist temple. In December, the government and the assembly for the first time worked together to pass the budget, which the government had previously handed down. After months of speculation and demands from the opposition that President Roh hold the interim assessment on his administration that he had promised while campaigning, Roh decided in March 1989 to postpone the evaluation indefinitely, citing the unstable political situation. Labor, farmer, and student unrest continued despite Roh's promises of further reforms. In April 1989, the government began cracking down against leftist elements it maintained were destabilizing the country. The nation was shocked by the deaths of seven policeman in Pusan in a confrontation with students. This was soon followed by the illegal visit of 71-year old dissident Rev. Moon Ik Kwan to North Korea. Rev. Moon embraced North Korean leader Kim Il Sung while in Pyongyang and was arrested upon his return to South Korea. In July, student activist Yim Su Kyong made an unauthorized visit to the North to attend Pyongyang's World Youth Festival and was arrested. In August opposition leader Kim Dae Jung was indicted in connection with unauthorized visits to North Korea by one of his party members, Suh Kyong Won. In October the government acknowledged that 1,315 people had been arrested in the first 9 months of 1989, including 284 for security violations. South Korean politics have changed dramatically because of the 1988 legislative elections, the assembly's greater powers under the 1987 constitution, and the influence of public opinion. There has been significant political liberalization since 1987, including freedom of the press and greater freedoms of expression and assembly than in the past. In 1988, the government released several hundred political prisoners and restored the civil rights of former detainees. In 1989, the government asserted its prerogatives to maintain public stability, raising concerns over human rights issues. The nation was stunned in January 1990 when the 3 political parties led by President Roh, Kim Young Sam, and Kim Jong Pil merged to form a new majority party, the Democratic Liberal Party (DLP). This new alliance left Kim Dae Jung and his Party for Peace and Democracy (PPD) as the primary opposition, since the tiny Democratic Party (DP) controlled just eight seats in the National Assembly. In July 1990, the DLP passed several significant bills without debate, and the PPD and the DP precipitated a legislative crisis by announcing a boycott of the national assembly. The PPD returned to the assembly in November, only after getting assurances on several issues, including greater local autonomy. In March 1990 the ROK held its first local elections in 30 years. Further local elections were planned for June 1991, and the trend toward greater democratization continued to gain momentum. Principal Government Officials President--Roh Tae Woo Prime Minister--Roh Jae Bong Deputy Prime Minister; Chairman, Economic Planning Board--Lee Seung Yun Minister of Foreign Affairs--Lee Sang Ock Minister of National Defense--Lee Jong Ku Ambassador to the United States--Hyun Hong Choo Ambassador to the UN--Roe Chang Hee Speaker of the National Assembly--Park Jyun Kyu Korea maintains an embassy in the United States at 2320 Massachusetts Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-939-5600). ECONOMY Over the past 25 years, the Republic of Korea's economic growth has been spectacular. Despite the need to maintain a large military, South Korea, one of the world's poorest countries only a generation ago, is now the United States' seventh largest trading partner and a middle-ranking industrial power. Lacking natural resources, Korea's greatest asset is its industrious, literate people. The division of the Korean peninsula in 1945 created two unbalanced economic units. North Korea inherited most of the peninsula's mineral and hydroelectric resources and most of the heavy industrial base built by the Japanese. South Korea was left with a large, unskilled labor pool and most of the peninsula's limited agricultural resources. Both north and south suffered massive destruction in the Korean war, but an influx of refugees added to the south's economic woes. South Korea began the postwar period with a per capita gross national product (GNP) far below that of the north. It received large amounts of US foreign assistance until the 1970s. All US direct aid was stopped in 1980. South Korea's meager mineral resources include tungsten, anthracite coal, iron ore, limestone, kaolinite, and graphite. There is no oil, and energy is a continuing concern for the ROK's economic planners. An ambitious program to develop nuclear power is well underway; Korea now has eight nuclear plants in operation, one under construction and two planned. The nation's successful industrial growth program began in the early 1960s, when the Park government instituted sweeping economic reforms emphasizing exports and labor-intensive light industries. The government also carried out a currency reform, strengthened financial institutions, and introduced flexible economic planning. From 1963 to 1978, real GNP rose at an annual rate of nearly 10%, with average real growth of more than 11% for the years 1973-78. While Korea's national production was rising throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the annual population growth rate declined to the current 1%, resulting in a 20-fold increase in per capita GNP. Per capita GNP, which reached $100 for the first time in 1963, now exceeds $4,000, or four times that of North Korea. The political and social unrest that followed the 1979 assassination of President Park and the effect of world economic developments, including the drastic increase in world oil prices in 1979, triggered a severe recession in Korea. In the early 1980s, external debt was a serious concern, peaking at $47 billion in 1985. The economy had already recovered somewhat by the spring of 1983 when a strengthening US economy helped stimulate Korean economic performance. From 1986 to 1988, booming exports led once again to high growth rates averaging 12% per year. Current account surpluses reached a total of $14 billion by the end of 1988, at which time foreign debt had decreased to $31 billion--18% of GNP and 44% of exports. Korea registered bilateral trade surpluses of about $10 billion with the US in 1987 and 1988. In 1989, Korea's global trade and current account surpluses and bilateral surplus with the US declined dramatically, due to a number of factors: appreciation of the won, labor disputes, cumulative wage increases and strong domestic demand. The surplus remained approximately $4 billion in 1990. It has yet to be demonstrated, however, whether a structural, lasting decline in Korea's surplus has begun. Long-term growth prospects remain bright. External factors will remain important. Korea continues to emphasize exports, while the quickly expanding domestic market provides greater economy of scale. The ability to adapt to a more open system suitable to a growing democracy and to Korea's greater role in the world economy are important to the continued success of the Korean economy. FOREIGN RELATIONS South Korea is committed to peaceful settlement of international differences, a commitment best illustrated by its restrained response to a number of provocations by North Korea over the past 15 years. These include the 1968 Blue House raid, the October 1983 bombing in Rangoon, Burma, which killed six of the ROK's most prominent leaders, and the November 1987 bomb explosion aboard Korean Air Lines flight 858, in which 115 lives were lost. Captured North Korean agents confessed to all of these acts. South Korea is becoming increasingly active in international affairs. Although not a UN member, it has launched a campaign to join that organization. However, North Korea opposes separate admission to the UN on the grounds that it would perpetuate the division of the peninsula; some of its allies support this contention. South Korea presently has a UN observer mission headed by an ambassador and is active in most UN specialized agencies. In addition, South Korea has made efforts to join or participate actively in many other international fora, ranging from the Antarctic Treaty to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). South Korea today has diplomatic relations with 148 countries and an even broader network of trading relationships. It has hosted a series of prestigious international events, including the 1988 summer Olympics. A total of 159 countries participated in the Seoul Olympics, making it the largest Olympics ever. Only six nations followed North Korea's call to boycott. Chinese, Soviet, and Eastern European participation in the Seoul Olympics underscored and accelerated President Roh's policy of "Nordpolitik"--the pursuit of wide-ranging relations with socialist nations and contacts and dialogue with North Korea. Nordpolitik has so far met with notable success. In February 1989, Hungary became the first communist nation to establish full diplomatic relations with the ROK. The ROK now has diplomatic relations with all the countries of Eastern and Central Europe except Albania. Nordpolitik's crowning achievement came in September 1990, when the ROK and USSR opened formal diplomatic relations. In early 1991 the ROK and People's Republic of China exchanged trade offices, a clear sign of improvement in relations and a possible first step toward eventual diplomatic relations. The South Korean government and politicians have long been concerned over the fate of the 35,000 Koreans on Sakhalin Island, now under Soviet control. Koreans were originally brought to Sakhalin by the Japanese as forced labor. A series of semi-official Korean delegations visited Moscow and Sakhalin in 1989. These contacts resulted in Soviet agreement to increase the flow of ethnic Koreans in Sakhalin allowed to visit South Korea. In addition, 20 first-generation Koreans from Sakhalin were repatriated in 1988 after more than 40 years away from their homeland. Following the ratification in 1965 of a treaty normalizing relations between Japan and Korea, the two nations have developed an extensive relationship centering on mutually beneficial economic activity. Although the legacy of historic antipathies has at times impeded cooperation, relations at the government level have improved steadily and significantly in the past several years. Korea's economic growth, energy requirements, and need for basic raw materials and for markets have given economic considerations high priority in the country's foreign policy. In light of these concerns, Korean diplomacy in recent years has also concentrated on broadening its international base of support with Third World nations, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), and Middle Eastern states. Korea wants to participate actively in Pacific basin economic affairs. It has offered to host in 1991 the third ministerial meeting on Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation initiated by Australian Prime Minister Hawke. Negotiating Efforts with North Korea Throughout the postwar period, both Korean governments have repeatedly affirmed their desire for reunification of the Korean peninsula, but, until 1971, the two governments had no direct, official communication or other contact. In August 1971, North and South Korea agreed to hold talks through their respective Red Cross societies with the aim of reuniting the many Korean families separated following the division of Korea and the Korean war. After a series of secret meetings, both sides announced on July 4, 1972, an agreement to work toward peaceful reunification and an end to the hostile atmosphere prevailing on the peninsula. Officials exchanged visits and regular communications were established through a south-north coordinating committee and the Red Cross, but the two sides made no substantive progress. These initial contacts quickly broke down and finally ended on August 13, 1973. The breakdown reflected basic differences in approach, with Pyongyang insisting on immediate steps toward reunification before discussing specific issues and Seoul maintaining that, given the long history of mutual distrust, reunification must come through a gradual, step-by-step process. South Korea maintains that a meaningful dialogue should be based on de facto recognition of each other's existing political, social, and economic systems. South Korea supports the recognition of both Koreas by the major powers in the region (US, USSR, PRC, and Japan), and the admission of both Koreas to the United Nations, pending peaceful reunification. North Korea currently rejects these ideas, although it applied for UN membership in 1949 (following the lead of the ROK) and supported a Soviet Union draft in 1957, resubmitted in 1958, which called for "simultaneous UN admission." The North now argues that this proposal would perpetuate the peninsula's division. Tension between North and South Korea increased dramatically in the aftermath of the 1983 North Korean assassination attempt on President Chun in Burma. North-South sports talks the following spring became acrimonious after the Rangoon bombing. South Korea's suspicions of the north's motives were not diminished by Pyongyang's proposal for "tripartite" talks on the future of the Korean peninsula. This initiative, made public in January 1984, called for talks with the United States in which "South Korean authorities" would be permitted to participate. The tripartite talks would replace the armistice agreement with a peace treaty, which would provide for withdrawal of all US troops and set the stage for a declaration of non-aggression between north and south. North Korea's offer to provide relief goods to victims of severe flooding in South Korea in September 1984--and South Korean acceptance--led to revived dialogue on several fronts: Red Cross talks to address the plight of separated families, economic and trade talks, and parliamentary talks. However, in January 1986, the north unilaterally suspended all talks, arguing that annual ROK/US military exercises were inconsistent with dialogue. The north also announced a unilateral moratorium on large-scale military exercises and called upon the US and ROK to do the same. The US and the ROK responded by reiterating their longstanding offer to allow DPRK officials to observe exercises and by proposing pre-notification of military exercises. These proposals were rejected by the north, and in 1987 the north resumed large-scale exercises. In a major new initiative on July 7, 1988, South Korean President Roh Tae Woo called for new efforts to promote exchanges, family reunification, inter-Korean trade and contact in international fora. President Roh called on Korea's friends and allies to pursue contacts with the north and said that the south intended to seek better relations with the USSR and China. Roh's initiative provided renewed momentum to a dialogue suspended since late 1985. Over the following months, the two sides met several times at Panmunjom to try to arrange a joint meeting of the two Korean parliaments. In early 1989, both sides also met in preliminary meetings to discuss arrangements for prime ministerial-level talks. In other fora, the two national Olympic committees met to discuss forming a joint team for the 1990 Asian Games in Beijing. In February 1989, North Korea suspended the parliamentary talks over US-ROK military exercises. In April the north suspended the prime ministerial talks and the sports talks until July, blaming South Korea's arrest of a dissident clergyman who visited North Korea without government approval. In the fall of 1989, the dialogue resumed in four fora--athletic, Red Cross, parliamentary, and prime ministerial. In the Red Cross talks, there were attempts to reach agreement on reunions of separated family members and exchanges of cultural arts troupes. Prime ministerial-level talks were initiated in 1990. Delegations met three times, although little concrete progress was made. The north cancelled the fourth meeting, scheduled for February 1991, once again citing annual exercises as the reason. Hopes for a summit (proposed repeatedly in the past) have also been unfulfilled. President Roh, in a speech to the UN General Assembly in October 1988, offered to go to Pyongyang at any time to discuss any issue, including North Korea's call for a mutual declaration of non-aggression. North Korean President Kim Il Sung did not respond positively. Kim had earlier stated that a summit must first take up his proposal for Koryo confederation and withdrawal of US forces. In his 1989 New Year's address, Kim suggested that Roh come to Pyongyang as a party head in a group with southern opposition and dissident leaders. However, he later referred to Roh by his official title and, in his 1991 New Year's address, offered a revised version of his confederal proposal in which he suggested that regional governments would exercise independent foreign and defense policy. Following the ROK government's 1988 decision to allow trade with the DPRK, South Korean firms began to import North Korean goods, all via third-country contracts. The DPRK has denounced and denied this trade. Nevertheless, the north publicized a late January 1989 visit by Hyundai Corporation founder Chong Chu Yong as well as a private protocol he signed to develop tourism and other projects in the north. US-KOREAN RELATIONS The United States remains committed to maintaining peace and stability on the Korean peninsula. The United States agreed in the 1954 US-ROK Mutual Defense Treaty to help the Republic of Korea defend itself from external aggression. In support of that commitment, the US maintains about 43,000 service personnel in Korea, including the army's Second Infantry Division and several air force tactical squadrons. To coordinate operations between these units and the 650,000-strong Korean armed forces, a combined forces command (CFC) was established in 1978. The CFC is headed by a US general who serves concurrently as commander in chief of the UN Command (CINC-UNC). Several aspects of the security relationship are changing as the US moves from a leading to a supporting role. South Korea has agreed to pay more of the US defense costs, to fund relocation of the large US headquarters garrison at Yongsan from Seoul, and to accept changes in the CFC command structure. The United States supports direct, government-to-government talks between the authorities of South and North Korea. The US believes that the fundamental decisions on the future of the Korean peninsula must be taken by the Korean people themselves. Therefore, the US has refused to be drawn into separate negotiations on Korean issues with North Korea, as Pyongyang has insisted. The most rapidly developing area in Korean-US relations is that of economics and trade. Korea is now its seventh largest trading partner, and the US seeks to improve its trade imbalance, through greater access to Korea's expanding market and improved investment opportunities for US business. Although Korea is reluctant to abandon industrial protection and the state-directed industrial policy which played such an important role in its industrialization, Korean policy-makers increasingly claim to recognize the benefits of liberalized trade for their economy. Korean leaders seem determined to manage successfully the complex economic relationship with the United States and to take a more active role in international economic fora as befits Korea's status as a major trading nation. Since the 1950s, the US-Korean relationship has developed into one of the most important in Asia. The 1982 celebration of the centennial of Korean-American diplomatic relations and President Reagan's 1983 visit to Korea underscored the quality of US-Korean relations. In 1989, a succession of high-level visits--President Bush (February), Vice President Quayle (September) and President Roh (October)--reaffirmed a determination to develop and strengthen the bilateral relationship further. President Roh visited the US again in June 1990. Principal US Officials Ambassador--Donald P. Gregg Commander in Chief, UNC--Gen. Robert RisCassi Deputy Chief of Mission--Raymond F. Burghardt Counselor for Political Affairs--E. Mason Hendrickson, Jr. Counselor for Economic Affairs--Richard Morford Counselor for Administrative Affairs--Oliver P. Garza Counselor for Public Affairs--John Fredenberg Consul General--Edward H. Wilkinson Counselor for Commercial Affairs--Peter Frederick Counselor for Agricultural Affairs--George J. Pope Chief, Joint US Military Advisory Group, Korea--Gen. Robert J. Jellison Defense Attache--Col. William McKinney, USA The US Embassy is located at 82 Sejong-Ro, Chongro-Ku, Seoul; APO San Francisco 96301. Tel. 82-2-732-2601, Fax no. 82-2-738-8845. The US Agricultural Trade Office is located at 63, 1-Ka, Ulchi-Ro, Choong-Ku, Seoul. Fax no. 82-2-752-5626. The US Export Development Office/US Trade Center is c/o US Embassy. Fax no. 82-2-739-1628. Director: William M. Yarmy. TRAVEL NOTES Climate and clothing: Korea's temperate, four-season climate is like that of the eastern US. Dress is more conservative than in the US. Visas: Visas are not required of tourists travelling to South Korea if their stay is less than 15 days or if they are simply transiting the country and have a ticket for an onward destination. Tourist visas, which should be obtained from a Korean consulate for longer stays, are issued for a 5-year period with multiple entries, but the length of any one visit should not exceed 90 days. Visas are required for all official and business visitors. No immunizations are required of travelers from the US. Health: Health services are fair to good in most major cities. Most Korean physicians have been trained in Western medicine, and hospital services are adequate. Outside of the major hotels, water generally is not potable. Transportation: International airports serve Seoul (Kimpo), Pusan (Kimhae), and Cheju Island. Extensive intercity air, rail, and bus service is available. There is an excellent network of local bus, taxi, and, in Seoul, subway services. Telecommunications: Seoul is 14 time zones ahead of Eastern Standard Time (13 hrs. during daylight-saving time). International direct-dial service is available to Korea's major cities. Available from the Superintendent of Documents, US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402: American University. South Korea--A Country Study. 1982. US Department of State. Key Officers of Foreign Service Posts. Triennial. . Korea Post Report. March 1986. . The Record on Korean Unification, 1943-1960. 1961. For information on economic trends, commercial development, production, trade regulations, and tariff rates, contact the International Trade Administration,US Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230.