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Can South Korea and Japan overcome their past and focus on the future?

Japan and South Korea appear to be entering a new era in defense cooperation. 

The Asian neighbors recently stepped up military ties, along with their treaty ally, the United States, and have held joint anti-submarine warfare exercises and ballistic missile defense drills. South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol marked a key anniversary in the relationship today by stating that Japan has “transformed from a militaristic aggressor of the past into a partner.” 

Why We Wrote This

What does it take to heal old wounds? Leaders in Japan and South Korea are finding out as they work to improve their countries’ fraught relations.

Solidifying such gains depends on resolving nagging historical conflicts from Japan’s 1910-1945 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula. With President Yoon and Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio at the helm, Seoul and Tokyo have a rare opportunity to do just that. 

Both sides are negotiating a deal to provide compensation and an apology to Koreans forced to labor for Japan during World War II, but experts say any deal must have domestic support or risk unraveling like past agreements. That will require strong leadership and courage.

“It’s not a lack of ideas and solutions to these particular problems that is halting progress, it’s a lack of political will” to mobilize public backing, says Daniel Sneider, a lecturer in East Asian Studies at Stanford University. “The window of opportunity exists, but it’s not going to be open for a long time.”

Coming off some of the most tense years since Japan and South Korea normalized relations in 1965, the two countries appear to be entering a new era in defense cooperation. 

The Asian neighbors recently stepped up military ties, along with their treaty ally, the United States, in response to geopolitical pressures including North Korea’s growing missile and nuclear weapons program, concerns surrounding China’s military buildup, and the war in Ukraine. They have held joint anti-submarine warfare exercises and ballistic missile defense drills, and pledged at a trilateral meeting in Washington last month “to further strengthen and diversify security cooperation to counter the threat” from North Korea. 

Today, following the trio’s first economic security dialogue on Tuesday, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol marked a key anniversary in relations by saying Japan has “transformed from a militaristic aggressor of the past into a partner” that “shares the same universal values.”

Why We Wrote This

What does it take to heal old wounds? Leaders in Japan and South Korea are finding out as they work to improve their countries’ fraught relations.

​​“You’ve seen a marked shift in bilateral relations over the past six to 12 months,” says Frank Aum, senior expert on Northeast Asia at the U.S. Institute of Peace and a former U.S. defense official.

Yet solidifying such gains in security ties between America’s two most important allies in Asia ultimately depends on progress in resolving their nagging historical conflicts – disputes dating from Japan’s 1910-1945 colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula that are deeply rooted in the national identity of both countries, experts say.

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