한일중 정상회의: 주요 쟁점과 전망
A very warm welcome to everyone, thanks for tuning in to Within the Frame. I'm Han Da-eun.
Leaders of South Korea, Japan and China gathered in Seoul today resuming the trilateral summit among the three nations that have been stalled for more than four years.
The summit came amid the Yoon administration’s strong push to mend South Korea’s strained relations with both Japan and China.
The three nations agreed to work closely together for regional peace and co-prosperity, but showed differences in contentious issues such as the denuclearization of North Korea.
What are the key takeaways from the summit and what are the prospects for the three Asia neighbors' future relations? For some clues, we turn to Lim Eun-jung, Associate Professor of International Studies at Kongju National University.
For insights from Japan, we also have Walter Sim, Japan Correspondent at The Straits Times joining us from Tokyo.
(LIM) Q1. What’s your overall assessment of the trilateral summit?
(SIM) Q2. President Yoon during a joint press conference held after the summit said that the joint declaration contains the three nations’ resolve to closely cooperate for regional peace and co-prosperity. What are the key takeaways from the joint declaration?
(LIM) Q3. President Yoon and the leaders of Japan and China attended a business summit, where the three sides agreed to expand regional trade and investment based on mutual respect and trust. What are some notable agreements made in the economic sector among the three neighbors, and what significance do they hold?
(SIM) Q4. Complicated concerns like North Korea have been excluded from the official agenda, but the North’s notice of its satellite launch that came just hours before the trilateral summit was hard to ignore. What’s your analysis of the reaction of South Korea, Japan, and China, and what implications do they carry?
(LIM) Q5. Leaders from Korea and China agreed to establish a 2+2 high-level diplomatic and security dialogue. What role do you expect it to play amid continuing North Korean provocations and escalating division among like-minded nations in the region?
(LIM) Q6. Korea and China also agreed to resume their second-phase Free Trade Agreement negotiations. What are your prospects for the talks, and the economic benefits it will bring?
(SIM) Q7. The thorny issue of the Naver-Line Yahoo feud was also brought to the table during one-on-one talks between Yoon and Kishida. The two leaders saw eye-to-eye that the Japanese government is not pressuring Naver to sell its stakes, but rather urging the company to strengthen security governance. In your view, how would the issue impact future Seoul-Tokyo relations?
(SIM) Q8. Kishida and Li Qiang held their first official summit. What were the focal points of the discussion, and how is the Japanese media interpreting the outcome of their rare talks?
(LIM) Q9. The three countries agreed to hold trilateral summits and ministerial-level talks on a regular basis. Before you go, tell us about the remaining challenges among the three Asian neighbors that call for extra attention to keep up the momentum for the three-way dialogue.
And that brings us to the end of this show.
Thank you for watching, and be sure to tune in same time tomorrow to join our conversation.
Good bye for now.
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2024-05-27, 18:30 (KST)
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