Area: 98,480 sq. km. (38,023 sq. mi.); slightly
larger than Indiana.
Cities (2005): Capital--Seoul
(10.3 million). Other
major cities--Busan (3.7 million), Daegu
(2.5 million), Incheon (2.6 million), Gwangju
(1.4 million), Daejeon (1.5 million), Ulsan (1.0
million).
Terrain: Partially forested mountain ranges
separated by deep, narrow valleys; cultivated
plains along the coasts, particularly in the
west and south.
Climate: Temperate, with rainfall heavier in
summer than winter.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Korean(s).
Population (2008): 48,379,392.
Population annual growth rate (2008): 0.269%.
Ethnic groups: Korean; small Chinese minority
(about 20,000).
Religions: Christianity, Buddhism, Shamanism,
Confucianism, Chondogyo.
Language: Korean; English widely taught in
junior high and high school.
Education: Years
compulsory--9. Enrollment--11.5
million. Attendance--middle
school 99%, high school 95%. Literacy--98%.
Health (2008): Infant
mortality rate--4.29/1,000. Life
expectancy--78.64 yrs. (men 75.34 yrs.;
women 82.17 yrs).
Work force (2007): 24.22 million. Services--75.2%; industry--17.3%; agriculture--7.5%.
Government
Type: Republic with powers shared between the
president, the legislature, and the courts.
Liberation: August 15, 1945.
Constitution: July 17, 1948; last revised 1987.
Branches: Executive--President
(chief of state); Prime Minister (head of
government). Legislative--unicameral
National Assembly. Judicial--Supreme
Court and appellate courts; Constitutional
Court.
Subdivisions: Nine provinces, seven
administratively separate cities (Seoul, Busan,
Incheon, Daegu, Gwangju, Daejeon, Ulsan).
Political parties: Grand National Party (GNP);
Democratic Party (DP), formerly known as United
Democratic Party (UDP); Liberal Forward Party (LFP);
Democratic Labor Party (DLP); Creative Korea
Party (CKP)
Suffrage: Universal at 19.
Central government budget (2007): Expenditures--$256.6
billion.
Defense (2007): 2.7% of GDP.
Economy
GDP (purchasing power parity in 2007): $1.201
trillion.
GDP growth rate: 2004, 4.7%; 2005, 4.2%; 2006,
5.1%; 2007, 5.0%.
Per capita GNI (2007): $20,045.
Consumer price index: 2004, 3.6%; 2005, 2.8%;
2006, 2.2%; 2007, 2.5%.
Natural resources: Coal, tungsten, graphite,
molybdenum, lead, hydropower potential.
Agriculture, including forestry and fisheries: Products--rice,
vegetables, fruit, root crops, barley; cattle,
pigs, chickens, milk, eggs, fish. Arable
land--16.58% of land area.
Industry: Types--Electronics
and electrical products, telecommunications,
motor vehicles, shipbuilding, mining and
manufacturing, petrochemicals, industrial
machinery, steel.
Trade (2007): Exports--$379
billion f.o.b.: electronic products
(semiconductors, cellular phones and equipment,
computers), automobiles, machinery and
equipment, steel, ships, petrochemicals. Imports--$349.6
billion f.o.b.: crude oil, food, machinery and
transportation equipment, chemicals and chemical
products, base metals and articles. Major
markets (2007)--China
(25.7%), U.S. (12.3%), Japan (6.8%), Hong Kong
(4.5%). Major
suppliers (2007)--China
(16.7%), Japan (16.4%), U.S. (10.5%), Saudi
Arabia (6.3%), U.A.E. (4.2%).
PEOPLE
Population
Korea's population is one of the most ethnically
and linguistically homogenous in the world.
Except for a small Chinese community (about
20,000), virtually all Koreans share a common
cultural and linguistic heritage. With 48.38
million people, South Korea has one of the
world's highest population densities. Major
population centers are located in the northwest,
southeast, and in the plains south of the Seoul-Incheon
area.
Korea has experienced one of the largest rates
of emigration, with ethnic Koreans residing
primarily in China (2.4 million), the United
States (2.1 million), Japan (600,000), and the
countries of the former Soviet Union (532,000).
Language
The Korean language is related to Japanese
and Mongolian. Although it differs grammatically
from Chinese and does not use tones, a large
number of Chinese cognates exist in Korean.
Chinese ideograms are believed to have been
brought into Korea sometime before the second
century BC. The learned class spoke Korean, but
read and wrote Chinese. A phonetic writing
system ("hangul") was invented in the 15th
century by King Sejong to provide a writing
system for commoners who could not read
classical Chinese. Modern Korean uses hangul
almost exclusively with Chinese characters in
limited use for word clarification.
Approximately 1,300 Chinese characters are used
in modern Korean. English is taught as a second
language in most primary and secondary schools.
Chinese and Japanese are widely taught at
secondary schools.
Religion
Half of the population actively practices
religion. Among this group, Christianity (49%)
and Buddhism (47%) comprise Korea's two dominant
religions. Though only 3% identified themselves
as Confucianists, Korean society remains highly
imbued with Confucian values and beliefs. The
remaining 1% of the population practice
Shamanism (traditional spirit worship) and
Chondogyo ("Heavenly Way"), a traditional
religion.
HISTORY
The myth of Korea's foundation by the
god-king Tangun in BC 2333 embodies the
homogeneity and self-sufficiency valued by the
Korean people. Korea experienced many invasions
by its larger neighbors in its 2,000 years of
recorded history. The country repelled numerous
foreign invasions despite domestic strife, in
part due to its protected status in the
Sino-centric regional political model during
Korea's Chosun dynasty (1392-1910). Historical
antipathies to foreign influence earned Korea
the title of "Hermit Kingdom" in the 19th
century.
With declining Chinese power and a weakened
domestic posture at the end of the 19th century,
Korea was open to Western and Japanese
encroachment. In 1910, Japan began a 35-year
period of colonial rule over Korea. As a result
of Japan's efforts to supplant the Korean
language and aspects of Korean culture, memories
of Japanese annexation still recall fierce
animosity and resentment, especially among older
Koreans. Nevertheless, import restrictions on
Japanese movies, popular music, fashion, and the
like have been lifted, and many Koreans,
especially the younger generations, eagerly
follow Japanese pop culture. Aspects of Korean
culture, including television shows and movies,
have also become popular in Japan.
Japan's surrender to the Allied Powers in 1945,
signaling the end of World War II, only further
embroiled Korea in foreign rivalries. Division
at the 38th parallel marked the beginning of
Soviet and U.S. trusteeship over the North and
South, respectively. On August 15, 1948 the
Republic of Korea (R.O.K.) was established, with
Syngman Rhee as the first President. On
September 9, 1948 the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea (D.P.R.K.) was established
under Kim Il Sung.
On June 25, 1950, North Korean forces invaded
South Korea. Led by the U.S., a 16-member
coalition undertook the first collective action
under United Nations Command (UNC). Following
China's entry on behalf of North Korea later
that year, a stalemate ensued for the final two
years of the conflict. Armistice negotiations,
initiated in July 1951, were ultimately
concluded on July 27, 1953 at Panmunjom, in what
is now the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). The
Armistice Agreement was signed by
representatives of the Korean People's Army, the
Chinese People's Volunteers, and the U.S.-led
United Nations Command (UNC). Though the R.O.K.
supported the UNC, it refused to sign the
Armistice Agreement. A peace treaty has never
been signed. The war left almost three million
Koreans dead or wounded and millions of others
homeless and separated from their families.
In the following decades, South Korea
experienced political turmoil under autocratic
leadership. President Syngman Rhee was forced to
resign in April 1960 following a student-led
uprising. The Second Republic under the
leadership of Chang Myon ended after only one
year, when Major General Park Chung-hee led a
military coup. Park's rule, which resulted in
tremendous economic growth and development but
increasingly restricted political freedoms,
ended with his assassination in 1979.
Subsequently, a powerful group of military
officers, led by Lieutenant General Chun Doo
Hwan, declared martial law and took power.
Throughout the Park and Chun eras, South Korea
developed a vocal civil society that led to
strong protests against authoritarian rule.
Composed primarily of students and labor union
activists, protest movements reached a climax
after Chun's 1979 coup and declaration of
martial law. A confrontation in Gwangju in 1980
left at least 200 civilians dead. Thereafter,
pro-democracy activities intensified even more,
ultimately forcing political concessions by the
government in 1987, including the restoration of
direct presidential elections.
In 1987, Roh Tae-woo, a former general, was
elected president, but additional democratic
advances during his tenure resulted in the 1992
election of a long-time pro-democracy activist,
Kim Young-sam. Kim became Korea's first civilian
elected president in 32 years. The 1997
presidential election and peaceful transition of
power marked another step forward in Korea's
democratization when Kim Dae-jung, a life-long
democracy and human rights activist, was elected
from a major opposition party. The transition to
an open, democratic system was further
consolidated in 2002, when self-educated human
rights lawyer, Roh Moo-hyun, won the
presidential election on a "participatory
government" platform. South Koreans voted for a
new president in December 2007. Former business
executive and Mayor of Seoul Lee Myung-bak's
5-year term began with his inauguration on
February 25, 2008.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The Republic of Korea (commonly known as "South
Korea") is a republic with powers nominally
shared among the presidency, the legislature,
and the judiciary, but traditionally dominated
by the president. The president is chief of
state and is elected for a single term of 5
years. The 299 members of the unicameral
National Assembly are elected to 4-year terms;
elections for the assembly were held on April 9,
2008. South Korea's judicial system comprises a
Supreme Court, appellate courts, and a
Constitutional Court. The judiciary is
independent under the constitution. The country
has nine provinces and seven administratively
separate cities--the capital of Seoul, along
with Busan, Daegu, Daejeon, Gwangju, Incheon and
Ulsan. Political parties include the Grand
National Party (GNP), Democratic Party (DP),
Liberal Forward Party (LFP), Creative Korea
Party (CKP), and Democratic Labor Party (DLP).
Suffrage is universal at age 19 (lowered from 20
in 2005).
Principal Government Officials
President--Lee Myung-bak
Prime Minister--Han Seung-soo
Minister of Strategy and Finance--Kang Man-soo
Minister of Education, Science and
Technology--Ahn Byong-man
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade--Yu
Myung-hwan
Minister of Unification--Kim Ha-joong
Minister of Justice--Kim Kyung-han
Minister of National Defense--Lee Sang-hee
Minister of Public Administration and
Security--Won Sei-hoon
Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism--Yu
In-chon
Minister of Food, Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries--Chang Tae-pyong
Minister of Knowledge Economy--Lee Youn-ho
Minister of Health, Welfare and Family
Affairs--Jeon Jae-hee
Minister of Environment--Lee Maan-ee
Minister of Labor--Lee Young-hee
Minister of Gender Equality--Byun Do-yoon
Minister of Land, Transport and Maritime
Affairs--Chung Jong-hwan
Director of the National Intelligence
Service--Kim Sung-ho
Senior Secretary to the President for Foreign
Affairs and National Security--Kim Sung-hwan
Chairman of Financial Services Commission--Jun
Kwang-woo
Ambassador to the U.S.--Lee Tae-sik
Ambassador to the UN--Park In-kook
Korea maintains an embassy in
the United States at 2450 Massachusetts Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-939-5600). Consulates General
are located in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago,
Honolulu, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, San
Francisco, Seattle, and Hagatna (Agana) in Guam.
ECONOMY
The Republic of Korea's economic growth over
the past several decades has been spectacular.
Per capita GNP, only $100 in 1963, is over
$20,000. South Korea is now the United States'
seventh-largest trading partner and is the
13th-largest economy in the world.
In the early 1960s, the government of Park Chung
Hee instituted sweeping economic policy changes
emphasizing exports and labor-intensive light
industries, leading to rapid debt-financed
industrial expansion. The government carried out
a currency reform, strengthened financial
institutions, and introduced flexible economic
planning. In the 1970s Korea began directing
fiscal and financial policies toward promoting
heavy and chemical industries, consumer
electronics, and automobiles. Manufacturing
continued to grow rapidly in the 1980s and early
1990s.
In recent years, Korea's economy moved away from
the centrally planned, government-directed
investment model toward a more market-oriented
one. Korea bounced back from the 1997-98 Asian
financial crisis with some International
Monetary Fund (IMF) assistance, but based
largely on extensive financial reforms that
restored stability to markets. These economic
reforms, pushed by President Kim Dae-jung,
helped Korea return to growth, with growth rates
of 10% in 1999 and 9% in 2000. The slowing
global economy and falling exports slowed growth
to 3.3% in 2001, prompting consumer stimulus
measures that led to 7.0% growth in 2002.
Consumer over-shopping and rising household
debt, along with external factors, slowed growth
to near 3% again in 2003. Economic performance
in 2004 improved to 4.6% due to an increase in
exports, and remained at or above 4% in 2005,
2006, and 2007.
Economists are concerned that South Korea's
economic growth potential has fallen because of
a rapidly aging population and structural
problems that are becoming increasingly
apparent. Foremost among these structural
concerns are the rigidity of South Korea's labor
regulations, the need for more constructive
relations between management and workers, the
country's underdeveloped financial markets, and
a general lack of regulatory transparency.
Korean policy makers are increasingly worried
about diversion of corporate investment to China
and other lower wage countries, and by Korea's
falling foreign direct investment (FDI).
President Lee Myung-bak was elected in December
2007 on a platform that promised to boost
Korea's economic growth rate through
deregulation, tax reform, increased FDI, labor
reform, and free trade agreements (FTAs) with
major markets.
North-South Economic Ties
Two-way trade between North and South Korea,
legalized in 1988, hit almost $1.8 billion in
2007, much of it related to out-processing or
assembly work undertaken by South Korean firms
in the Kaesong Industrial Complex (KIC). A
significant portion of the total also includes
donated goods provided to the North as
humanitarian assistance or as part of
inter-Korean cooperation projects. According to
R.O.K. figures, about 60% of the total trade
consisted of commercial transactions, much of
that based on processing-on-commission
arrangements. The R.O.K. is North Korea's
second-largest trading partner.
Since the June 2000 North-South summit, North
and South Korea have reconnected their east and
west coast railroads and roads where they cross
the DMZ and are working to improve these
transportation routes. North and South Korea
conducted tests of the east and west coast
railroads on May 17, 2007 and began cross-border
freight service between Kaesong in the D.P.R.K.
and Munsan in the R.O.K. in December 2007. Much
of the work done in North Korea has been funded
by South Korea. The west coast rail and road are
complete as far north as the KIC (six miles
north of the DMZ), but little work is being done
north of Kaesong. On the east coast, the road is
complete but the rail line is far from
operational. Since 2003, tour groups have been
using the east coast road to travel from South
Korea to Mt. Geumgang in North Korea, where
cruise ship-based tours had been permitted since
1998.
As of September 2008, 79 South Korean firms
including apartment-type factories were
manufacturing goods in the KIC, employing more
than 33,000 North Korean workers. Most of the
goods are sold in South Korea; a small quantity
is being exported to foreign markets. Ground was
broken on the complex in June 2003, and the
first products were shipped from the KIC in
December 2004. Plans envision 1,500 firms
employing 350,000 workers by 2012.
R.O.K.-organized tours to Mt. Geumgang in North
Korea began in 1998. Since then, more than a
million visitors have traveled to Mt. Geumgang.
The R.O.K. suspended tours to Mt. Geumgang in
July 2008, however, following the shooting death
of a South Korean tourist at the resort by a
D.P.R.K. soldier.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
In August 1991, South Korea joined the United
Nations along with North Korea and is active in
most UN specialized agencies and many
international forums. The Republic of Korea also
hosted major international events such as the
1988 Summer Olympics, the 2002 World Cup Soccer
Tournament (co-hosted with Japan), and the 2002
Second Ministerial Conference of the Community
of Democracies.
Economic considerations have a high priority in
Korean foreign policy. The R.O.K. seeks to build
on its economic accomplishments to increase its
regional and global role. It is a founding
member of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) forum and chaired the organization in
2005.
The Republic of Korea maintains diplomatic
relations with more than 170 countries and a
broad network of trading relationships. The
United States and Korea are allied by the 1953
Mutual Defense Treaty. Korea and Japan
coordinate closely on numerous issues. This
includes consultations with the United States on
North Korea policy.
Korean Peninsula: Reunification and Recent
Developments
For almost 20 years after the 1950-53 Korean
War, relations between North and South Korea
were minimal and very strained. Official contact
did not occur until 1971, beginning with Red
Cross contacts and family reunification projects
in 1985. In the early 1990s, relations between
the two countries improved with the 1991
South-North Basic Agreement, which acknowledged
that reunification was the goal of both
governments, and the 1992 Joint Declaration of
Denuclearization. However, divergent positions
on the process of reunification and North Korean
weapons programs, compounded by South Korea's
tumultuous domestic politics and the 1994 death
of North Korean leader Kim Il-sung, contributed
to a cycle of warming and cooling of relations.
Relations improved again following the 1997
election of Kim Dae-jung. His "Sunshine Policy"
of engagement with the D.P.R.K. set the stage
for the historic June 2000 inter-Korean summit
between President Kim and North Korean leader
Kim Jong-il. President Kim was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in 2000 for the policy, but the
prize was somewhat tarnished by revelations of a
$500 million dollar "payoff" to North Korea that
immediately preceded the summit.
Relations again became tense following the
October 2002 North Korean acknowledgement of a
covert program to enrich uranium for nuclear
weapons. Following this acknowledgement, the
United States, along with the People's Republic
of China, proposed multilateral talks among the
concerned parties to deal with this issue. At
the urging of China and its neighbors, the
D.P.R.K. agreed to meet with China and the
United States in April 2003. In August of that
year, the D.P.R.K. agreed to attend Six-Party
Talks aimed at ending the North's pursuit of
nuclear weapons that added the Republic of
Korea, Japan, and Russia to the table. Two more
rounds of Six-Party Talks between the United
States, the Republic of Korea, Japan, China, and
the D.P.R.K. were held in February and June of
2004. At the third round, the United States put
forward a comprehensive proposal aimed at
completely, verifiably, and irreversibly
eliminating North Korea's nuclear weapons
programs.
A fourth round of talks was held in two sessions
spanning a period of 20 days between July and
September 2005. All parties agreed to a Joint
Statement of Principles on September 19, 2005,
in which, among other things, the D.P.R.K.
committed to "abandoning all nuclear weapons and
existing nuclear programs and returning, at an
early date, to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and to IAEA
safeguards." The Joint Statement also committed
the United States and other parties to certain
actions as the D.P.R.K. denuclearized. The
United States offered a security assurance,
specifying that it had no nuclear weapons on
R.O.K. territory and no intention to attack or
invade the D.P.R.K. with nuclear or other
weapons. Finally, the United States and the
D.P.R.K., as well as the D.P.R.K. and Japan,
agreed to undertake steps to normalize
relations, subject to their respective bilateral
policies. On October 9, 2006, North Korea
announced a successful nuclear test, verified by
the United States on October 11. In response,
the United Nations Security Council, citing
Chapter VII of the UN Charter, unanimously
adopted Resolution 1718, condemning North
Korea's action and imposing sanctions on certain
luxury goods and trade of military units,
weapons of mass destruction (WMD)-related parts,
and technology transfers. The Six-Party Talks
resumed in December 2006 after a 13-month
hiatus. Following a bilateral meeting between
the United States and D.P.R.K. in Berlin in
January 2007, another round of Six-Party Talks
was held in February 2007. On February 13, 2007,
the parties reached an agreement on "Initial
Actions for the Implementation of the Joint
Statement" in which North Korea agreed to shut
down and seal its Yongbyon nuclear facility,
including the reprocessing facility, and to
invite back International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) personnel to conduct all necessary
monitoring and verification of these actions.
The other five parties agreed to provide
emergency energy assistance to North Korea in
the amount of 50,000 tons of heavy fuel oil
(HFO) in the initial phase (within 60 days) and
the equivalent of up to 950,000 tons of HFO in
the next phase of North Korea's
denuclearization. The six parties also
established five working groups to form specific
plans for implementing the Joint Statement in
the following areas: denuclearization of the
Korean Peninsula, normalization of D.P.R.K.-U.S.
relations, normalization of D.P.R.K.-Japan
relations, economic and energy cooperation, and
a Northeast Asia peace and security mechanism.
All parties agreed that the working groups would
meet within 30 days of the agreement, which they
did. The agreement also envisions the
directly-related parties negotiating a permanent
peace regime on the Korean Peninsula at an
appropriate separate forum. As part of the
initial actions, North Korea invited IAEA
Director General ElBaradei to Pyongyang in early
March for preliminary discussions on the return
of the IAEA to the D.P.R.K. The sixth round of
Six-Party Talks took place on March 19-23, 2007.
The parties reported on the first meetings of
the five working groups. At the invitation of
the D.P.R.K., Assistant Secretary of State
Christopher Hill visited Pyongyang in June 2007
as part of ongoing consultations with the six
parties on implementation of the Initial Actions
agreement. In July 2007, the D.P.R.K. shut down
the Yongbyon nuclear facility, as well as an
uncompleted reactor at Taechon, and IAEA
personnel returned to the D.P.R.K. to monitor
and verify the shut-down and to seal the
facility. Concurrently, the R.O.K., China,
United States, and Russia initiated deliveries
of approximately 50,000 metric tons of HFO per
month, with the R.O.K. completing delivery of
the first tranche of 50,000 metric tons in
August, China the second in September, the
United States the third in November, and Russia
the fourth in January. These four parties are
expected to continue to provide monthly
shipments of HFO as the D.P.R.K. continues to
implement denuclearization steps. All five
working groups met in August and September to
discuss detailed plans for implementation of the
next phase of the Initial Actions agreement, and
the D.P.R.K. invited a team of experts from the
United States, China, and Russia to visit the
Yongbyon nuclear facility in September 2007 to
discuss specific steps that could be taken to
disable the facility. The subsequent September
27-30 Six-Party plenary meeting resulted in the
October 3, 2007 agreement on "Second-Phase
Actions for the Implementation of the Joint
Statement."
Under the terms of the October 3 agreement, the
D.P.R.K. agreed to disable all existing nuclear
facilities subject to abandonment under the
September 2005 Joint Statement and the February
13 agreement. The parties agreed to complete by
December 31, 2007 a set of disablement actions
for the three core facilities at Yongbyon--the
5-MW(e) Experimental Reactor, the Radiochemical
Laboratory (Reprocessing Plant), and the Fresh
Fuel Fabrication Plant--with oversight from a
team of U.S. experts, The D.P.R.K. also agreed
to provide a complete and correct declaration of
all its nuclear programs in accordance with the
February 13 agreement by December 31, 2007 and
reaffirmed its commitment not to transfer
nuclear materials, technology, or know-how.
In November 2007, the D.P.R.K. began to disable
the three core facilities at Yongbyon and
complete most of the agreed disablement actions
by the end of the year. Due to health and safety
concerns, disablement activities at the 5-MW(e)
reactor continued beyond December 31, 2007.
Assistant Secretary of State Christopher Hill
visited Pyongyang again in December 2007 as part
of ongoing consultations on the implementation
of Second-Phase actions and carried with him a
letter from the President of the United States
to Kim Jong-il. The D.P.R.K. missed the December
31 deadline to provide a complete and correct
declaration, but efforts to secure a declaration
continued into January 2008.
While the D.P.R.K. missed the December 31
deadline to provide a complete and correct
declaration, it provided its declaration to the
Chinese, chair of the Six-Party Talks, on June
26, 2008. The D.P.R.K. also imploded the cooling
tower at the Yongbyon facility in late June 2008
before international media. Following the
D.P.R.K's progress on disablement and provision
of a declaration, President Bush announced the
lifting of the application of the Trading with
the Enemy Act (TWEA) with respect to the
D.P.R.K. and notified Congress of his intent to
rescind North Korea's designation as a state
sponsor of terrorism. President Bush made clear
that the United States needs to have a strong
regime in place to verify the D.P.R.K.'s
declaration before it removes the D.P.R.K. from
the list of state sponsors of terrorism. As of
August 2008, the United States continued to work
with its Six-Party partners to establish such a
verification regime, and remained prepared to
move forward with taking the D.P.R.K. off of the
state sponsors of terrorism list once a
verification regime was in place.
U.S.-KOREAN RELATIONS
The United States believes that the question of
peace and security on the Korean Peninsula is,
first and foremost, a matter for the Korean
people to decide.
Under the 1953 U.S.-R.O.K. Mutual Defense
Treaty, the United States agreed to help the
Republic of Korea defend itself against external
aggression. Since that time in support of this
commitment, the United States has maintained
military personnel in Korea, including the
Army's Second Infantry Division and several Air
Force tactical squadrons. To coordinate
operations between these units and the over
680,000-strong Korean armed forces, a Combined
Forces Command (CFC) was established in 1978.
The head of the CFC also serves as Commander of
the United Nations Command (UNC) and U.S. Forces
Korea (USFK). The current commander is General
Burwell Baxter "B.B." Bell.
Several aspects of the security relationship are
changing as the U.S. moves from a leading to a
supporting role. In 2004, agreement was reached
on the return of the Yongsan base in Seoul--as
well as a number of other U.S. bases--to the
R.O.K. and the eventual relocation of all U.S.
forces to south of the Han River. In addition,
the U.S. and R.O.K. agreed to move 12,500 of the
37,500 U.S. troops out of Korea by 2008. At the
same time U.S. troops are being redeployed from
Korea, the U.S. will bolster combined
U.S./R.O.K. deterrent and defense capabilities
by providing $11 billion in force enhancements
in Korea and at regional facilities over the
next four years.
As Korea's economy has developed, trade and
investment ties have become an increasingly
important aspect of the U.S.-R.O.K.
relationship. Korea is the United States'
seventh-largest trading partner (ranking ahead
of larger economies such as France, Italy, and
India), and there are significant flows of
manufactured goods, agricultural products,
services and technology between the two
countries. Major American firms have long been
major investors in Korea, while Korea's leading
firms have begun to make significant investments
in the United States. The implementation of
structural reforms contained in the IMF's 1998
program for Korea improved access to the Korean
market and improved trade relations between the
United States and Korea. Building on that
improvement, the United States and Korea
launched negotiations on the U.S.-Korea Free
Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA) on February 2, 2006.
The KORUS FTA was signed by U.S. Trade
Representative Susan Schwab and South Korean
Trade Minister Kim Hyun-chong on June 30, 2007
and is currently awaiting ratification in the
U.S. Congress and the Korean National Assembly.
The KORUS FTA is a comprehensive FTA that
eliminates virtually all barriers to trade and
investment between the two countries. Tariffs on
95% of trade between the two countries will be
eliminated within three years of implementation,
with virtually all the remaining tariffs being
removed within ten years of implementation; the
FTA also contains chapters that address
non-tariff measures in investment, intellectual
property, services, competition policy, and
other areas. The KORUS FTA is the largest free
trade agreement Korea has ever signed, and the
largest free trade agreement for the United
States since the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) in 1992. Economists have
projected the FTA will generate billions of
dollars in increased trade and investment
between the United States and the Republic of
Korea, and boost economic growth and job
creation in both countries.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--D.
Kathleen Stephens
Deputy Chief of Mission--William A. Stanton
Counselor for Political Affairs--Joseph Yun
Counselor for Economic Affairs--Andrew Quinn
Counselor for Management Affairs--Rob Davis
Counselor for Public Affairs--Patrick Linehan
Consul General--Julia Stanley
Counselor for Commercial Affairs--John Fogarasi
Counselor for Agricultural Affairs--Lloyd
Harbert
Chief, Joint U.S. Military Advisory Group, Korea
(JUSMAG-K)--Col. Kevin Madden
Defense Attaché--Col. Kip McCormick
Drug Enforcement Administration, Special Agent
in Charge--Troy Derby
Foreign Broadcast Information Service, Seoul
Bureau Chief--J. Loren Reeder
DHS-Citizenship and Immigration
Services--Kenneth Sherman
DHS-Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Attaché--KyungYul Steven Kim
Federal Bureau of Investigation Legal
Attaché--Matthew Moon
The U.S.
Embassy in
South Korea is located at 32 Sejong-no,
Jongno-gu, Seoul 110-710. The contact
information for the U.S. Embassy is: American
Embassy-Seoul, Unit 15550, APO AP 96205-5550
(tel.: 82-2-397-4114; fax: 82-2-738-8845). The
U.S. Agricultural Trade Office (ATO) is located
at 146-1, Susong-dong, Jongno-gu, Leema Bldg.,
Rm. 303, Seoul 110-140 (fax: 82-2-720-7921). The
U.S. Export Development Office/U.S. Trade Center
can be reached c/o U.S. Embassy (fax:
82-2-739-1628).
Additional Resources
The following general country guides are
available from the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC
20402:
Library of Congress. North
Korea: A Country Study. 1994.
Library of Congress. South
Korea: A Country Study. 1992.
Department of State. The
Record on Korean Unification 1943-1960.
1961.
Department of the Army. Communist
North Korea: A Bibliographic Survey. 1971.
Internet Resources on North and South Korea
The following sites are provided to give an
indication of Internet sites on Korea. T