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New South Korea leader faces tightrope act between US alliance, stronger China ties

Analysts expect Lee Jae-myung’s foreign policy to be marked by pragmatism, but balancing economic and security interests will be challenge

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South Korean President Lee Jae-myung takes the oath of office in the National Assembly building in Seoul, South Korea on Wednesday. Photo: Xinhua

Hours after Lee Jae-myung was sworn in as the president of South Korea early on Wednesday, Chinese President Xi Jinping extended a congratulatory message, emphasising that China placed “great importance” on strengthening ties with its neighbour amid an increasingly uncertain global landscape.

During his campaign, Lee pledged to repair strained ties with China and North Korea and underscored China’s role as a vital trading partner.

Analysts predicted more stable China-South Korea relations to come, saying Lee’s foreign policy would be marked by “pragmatism”, flexibility and economic urgency – a departure from former president Yoon Suk-yeol, who steered the country to align more with the United States.
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However, diplomatic observers also cautioned that any improvement might be constrained by South Korea’s delicate position within two “triangles”: the China-South Korea-Japan dynamic and the South Korea-Japan-US alliance.

They said his ambition to maintain a balanced approach between Beijing and Washington would still be tested.

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Da Zhigang, researcher at the Institute of Northeast Asian Studies at the Heilongjiang Provincial Academy of Social Sciences, said Lee was likely to seek a more “balanced and flexible” approach to China that pursued South Korean domestic interests, compared with Yoon’s more ideological and nationalistic approach.

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