How Seoul raced to conclude U.S. trade deal ahead of
North Korea talks
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[March 30, 2018]
By Jane Chung and Christine Kim
SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean trade
officials braved snowstorms, ate instant noodles to save time and spent
weeks hotel-hopping in Washington as they raced to overcome major trade
hurdles with their U.S. ally ahead of high-stakes nuclear discussions
with North Korea.
What was meant to be a week-long trip to Washington stretched into a
four-week marathon, as dozens of Seoul officials sought to wrap up talks
aimed at amending the six-year-old U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement known
as KORUS, according to several South Korean officials with direct
knowledge of the matter.
U.S. plans announced earlier this month to impose hefty tariffs on steel
and aluminum imports added urgency to the trade negotiations. As the
third-largest steel exporter to the United States, South Korea had a lot
to lose from 25 percent tariffs.
Seoul also felt it couldn't afford a protracted trade dispute with its
most important ally at a time when the two need to work together to
contain a nuclear-armed North Korea, the officials told Reuters.
"This had to work well," a senior official at South Korea's presidential
Blue House told Reuters. "It was right to settle this as soon as
possible because if this remains ahead of inter-Korean talks and
U.S.-North Korea talks, it could unnecessarily complicate our
relationship."
U.S. President Donald Trump initially welcomed the breakthrough as a
"great deal for American and Korean workers", a marked turnaround from a
year ago when he told Reuters he would either renegotiate or scrap what
he called a "horrible" trade deal.
But Trump said on Thursday he may hold up signing it until after an
agreement is reached with North Korea on denuclearisation, saying such a
deal was "a very strong card" to ensure fairness on the new trade pact.
Trump is expected to meet with North Korea's Kim Jong Un in May after
the two Koreas hold their first summit in more than a decade in late
April. All parties are expected to discuss the denuclearisation of North
Korea.
"FINALLY WITHIN REACH"
Whenever South Korean President Moon Jae-in had a phone call with Trump
to discuss the North Korean nuclear issue in recent months, Moon also
raised the trade agenda, the Blue House official said.
In their latest call on March 16, while the two countries' trade
representatives were holding a third round of trade talks in Washington,
Moon asked Trump to have a "keen interest" in the matter and work toward
a speedy trade agreement before their respective summit meetings Kim,
the Blue House said at the time.
Around that time, South Korean negotiators started to see a glimmer of
hope they could save the trade pact, which has seen the U.S. goods trade
deficit with South Korea double since 2012 when it took effect.
"The negotiations started to make progress around March 17, and that's
why our trade team decided to stay longer because they thought agreement
was finally within reach," said a South Korean senior trade ministry
official.
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Rolled steel are seen at a Hyundai Steel plant in Dangjin, about 130
km (81 miles) southwest of Seoul June 15, 2011. REUTERS/Lee Jae-Won
The official and another trade official said nearly 30 South Korean negotiators
had to move hotels repeatedly in Washington when their trip took longer than
expected, at times finding themselves crammed into one hotel room to work on
their negotiation strategy for the next day.
"We mostly lived off on instant noodles and quick seaweed rice wraps bought from
Korean supermarkets to save time," the official said.
The efforts culminated in a revised pact the two countries announced this week
that gives U.S. automakers and pharmaceuticals more access to the South Korean
market.
It also lifted the threat of a 25 percent U.S. tariff on South Korean steel in
exchange for quotas that will cut imports of Korean steel by about 30 percent.
"We swiftly removed potential conflicts between the two countries at a time when
close cooperation between South Korea and the United States is more important
than ever," a second senior Blue House official said.
All the South Korean officials interviewed by Reuters asked not to be named due
to the sensitivity of the issue.
"AS COLD AS SIBERIA"
The talks didn't get off to a good start as the United States "kept asking us to
make concessions unilaterally," South Korean Trade Minister Kim Hyun-chong said
in an interview broadcast live to the Blue House’s Facebook account on Thursday.
"When we first met to talk, the mood was as cold as Siberia and our meeting only
lasted for 21 minutes," Kim said, referring to U.S. Trade Representative Robert
Lighthizer. "Later on, we got closer and our relations developed to something
like a bromance."
From the start, South Korea saw that for the deal to survive, concessions were
inevitable in autos, which made up over 70 percent of its 2017 trade surplus
with the United States.
"If the free trade deal got terminated and 8 percent tariffs revived on South
Korean auto exports, that would have been an absolute nightmare. Problem was,
how do we sell a deal that doesn't do anything good for us?," a senior South
Korean government official said.
"The steel issue effectively provided an opening. We make concessions in autos
that we saw as inevitable anyway, and in return become the first country to be
exempt from steel tariffs. This suddenly became a win-win."
(GRAPHIC: Nuclear North Korea - http://tmsnrt.rs/2lE5yjF)
(Reporting By Jane Chung and Christine Kim. Additional reporting by Cynthia Kim.
Editing by Soyoung Kim and Lincoln Feast)
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