Home to 28,000 U.S. troops, S.Korea unlikely to avoid a Taiwan conflict
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[September 26, 2022]
By Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) - Tensions over Taiwan have
raised the thorny issue of whether U.S. troops based in South Korea
would be involved in any conflict, with American and South Korean
officials acknowledging that the peninsula could easily be dragged into
a crisis.
South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol told CNN in an interview aired on
Sunday that his country was keen to work with the United States to
“expand freedom”, but that in a conflict over Taiwan, North Korea would
be more likely to stage a provocation and that the alliance should focus
on that first.
North Korea has a mutual defence treaty with China and military analysts
suggest it could coordinate with Beijing or take advantage of a crisis
to pursue its own military goals.
Last week U.S. President Joe Biden said U.S forces would defend Taiwan
in the event of a Chinese invasion, drawing an angry response from China
and raising the stakes for U.S. allies that host American troops in the
region.
China is South Korea's largest economic partner, and Seoul could find
itself on the literal front lines of any regional military conflict.
North Korea has backed China's claims over Taiwan, and accused
Washington of trying to build an "Asian NATO" that would import crises
like the one in Ukraine to Asia.
Yoon has vowed to forge closer ties with the United States, which has
had a mutual defence treaty with South Korea since the 1950-1953 Korean
War and stations around 28,500 troops in the country.
But when asked whether South Korea will help the United States if China
attacks Taiwan, Yoon did not directly answer.
Last week the commander of U.S. Forces Korea (USFK), General Paul
LaCamera, said it was prudent to plan for all possibilities.
"What begins in one region spreads very quickly within the region and
around the world," LaCamera told a seminar hosted by the Institute for
Corean-American Studies (ICAS) on Tuesday.
South Korean troops fought alongside Americans in Vietnam and supported
the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but questions of future involvement
are up to South Korea alone, LaCamera said.
In response, South Korean Vice Defence Minister Shin Beom-chul told
broadcaster MBC that there had been no such discussions between
Washington and Seoul.
"I can tell our citizens that we will ensure consultations would not
move in a direction that undermines security on the Korean Peninsula,"
he said.
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U.S. President Joe Biden has an ice
cream as he greets the US troops during his visit to the Air
Operations Center at Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea, May
22, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
A USFK spokesman referred questions about its role in any regional
conflict to the Indo-Pacific Command and the Pentagon, which did not
immediately respond.
South Korea's Ministry of Defence also did not immediately respond
to requests for comment.
Privately, many South Korean military officials expect they could
once again face off against China, with memories of Beijing's
intervention on the side of the North in the Korean War, said one
former South Korean general.
"They absolutely do not trust China, it's something they feel in
their bones," he said.
'STRATEGIC FLEXIBILITY'
In his confirmation hearing last year, LaCamera said he would seek
to integrate USFK into "operational plans supporting U.S. interests
and objectives in the region".
In 2006, amid Washington's push to mobilise forces for the "war on
terror", Seoul agreed to "strategic flexibility" under which it
would "understand", but not necessarily support, the deployment of
USFK units to other locations, as long as it is consulted, said
Sungmin Cho, a professor at the Pentagon's Asia-Pacific Center for
Security Studies (APCSS) in Hawaii.
"(It's) still ambiguous," he said. "This needs to be talked out
between Seoul and Washington."
Cho said North Korea could support China in a Taiwan conflict by
launching an attack on South Korea, or simply use the conflict as a
chance to push forward with its nuclear or missile development.
USFK is heavily focused on land-based troops, which would be of
limited use in a conflict that remains focused around the Taiwan
Straight, said former General Park Cheol-kyun, who worked on
international policy at South Korea's Defense Ministry until May.
"You need the navy, air force, and intelligence assets, so most of
the U.S. forces that could contain or deter Chinese provocation, are
mostly in Japan," he said, but added that the U.S.-South Korea
alliance can't afford to ignore China's role in the region.
(Reporting by Josh Smith; Editing by Michael Perry)
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