SEOUL: South Korean President Lee Jae Myung is set for a summit with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi on Tuesday (Jan 13), a week after one with Chinese President Xi Jinping, as Seoul seeks to balance ties with both neighbours.
The summit in Japan’s Nara City comes amid a growing diplomatic dispute between Beijing and Tokyo, and analysts expect Takaichi to highlight the stability of three-way ties between the United States, Japan and South Korea.
Lee is seeking to balance ties with China and Japan, which could make it easier to reach pacts in business fields such as artificial intelligence.
Lee said the conflict between China and Japan was not desirable for regional peace, but Seoul would not meddle in the ongoing row.
“It’s clear that Chinese President Xi Jinping has a very negative view of Japan’s position on the matter of Taiwan,” Lee said during an interview with Japanese broadcaster NHK. “I think it’s a matter between China and Japan, not something we should deeply involve ourselves in or interfere with.”
BEIJING IRKED BY TAKAICHI COMMENTS ON TAIWAN
Beijing was infuriated after Takaichi said in November that a Chinese attack on Taiwan could be deemed an existential threat to Japan, which could trigger a military response from Tokyo.
China regards Taiwan as part of its territory, a claim the island’s government rejects.
In the face of the tension with China, Japan may seek to bolster diplomatic ties with South Korea, possibly through a strategic partnership, said Lee Chang-min, another Japan expert at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies.
“Not only has Japan’s relationship with China deteriorated, the US has also put a little distance from Japan in its (Taiwan) stance,” said Lee.
South Korea’s Lee and Takaichi may discuss the Japan-China dispute during their meeting, a security adviser to Lee, Wi Sung-lac, said on Friday. However, South Korea is unlikely to take sides, analysts said.
NORTH KOREA ISSUES
Perennial concerns, such as the denuclearisation of the Korean peninsula and the fate of Japanese nationals abducted by neighbouring North Korea, are also expected to figure on the agenda.
However, analysts said the areas offering the easiest scope for concrete agreements may lie in business, such as cooperation in AI and chips, and easing travel for business executives between the countries.
The two leaders are expected to extensively discuss “areas directly related to people’s livelihoods … such as intellectual property and AI”, Wi said.
The summit in Takaichi’s home prefecture of Nara also offers Lee an opportunity to take up issues of regional cooperation, as part of a pledge to spur development in areas outside Seoul.
Ties are still plagued by longstanding tension on topics such as Japan’s colonisation of Korea, including the treatment of Korean women forced to work in its wartime military brothels.
Such historical issues have moved from the centre stage of relations for now, analysts said, though some in South Korea still want them to stay high on the agenda.
Lee’s two-day visit to Japan, shorter than his four-day trip to China, is part of “shuttle diplomacy” efforts that the two countries agreed on last year.