CAMPBELL Kurt M

Korean changes, Asian challenges and the U.S. role - 2003

Entered on 04/APR/2003

The George W Bush administration faces difficult challenges in Asia associated with the rise of China and the potential for instability in Indonesia. Yet perhaps the most pressing early decisions facing the new administration concern the Korean Peninsula. This Korean challenge is a somewhat incongruous one. Major strategic issues in Asia are usually associated with negative development, such as instability across the Taiwan Straits. The June 2000 North-South Korean summit, however, has presented the United States with the opposite dilemma. Enhanced stability on the Korean Peninsula raises the prospect of an overall improvement in the strategic situation in Northeast Asia. But these developments also carry uncertain implications for the United States and its influence in Asia.


JAPAN--FOREIGN RELATIONS--UNITED STATES
KOREA--FOREIGN RELATIONS--UNITED STATES
NORTH KOREA--FOREIGN RELATIONS--UNITED STATES
SOUTH KOREA--FOREIGN RELATIONS--UNITED STATES
UNITED STATES--FOREIGN POLICY
UNITED STATES--FOREIGN RELATIONS
UNITED STATES--FOREIGN RELATIONS--JAPAN
UNITED STATES--FOREIGN RELATIONS--KOREA