About the Author
John Lee
John Lee is the editor of KOREA PRO, based in Seoul. Prior to that, he was a contributor for NK News and KOREA PRO. His focus is on South Korean foreign policy and ROK-U.S. relations.
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Opinion Make no mistake: Reopening the Kaesong Industrial Complex is a terrible ideaRestarting work at KIC would require total transparency from North Korea - an impossible scenario After former United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced that he would not seek to become the next president of South Korea, South Korea’s ruling conservatives were left without a clear candidate to succeed the beleaguered President Park Geun-hye. From Rhee In-je to Won Yoo-chul, there isn’t a single conservative candidate left who has a realistic chance of becoming the next South Korean president if the election were held today. What that means is that Moon Jae-in, with a little over 33% in his approval ratings, has the best chance of becoming the next South Korean president. Just in case anyone has forgotten, Moon Jae-in was President Roh Moo-hyun’s chief-of-staff and, according to former Foreign Minister Song Min-soon’s memoirs, he agreed to ask the North Korean government how South Korea ought to vote in a 2007 UN General Assembly vote that condemned North Korea’s atrocities against its own people. © Korea Risk Group. All rights reserved. |