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South Korea tells Japan to apologise before military cooperation

South Korea tells Japan to apologise before military cooperation
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Advertisement South Korea tells Japan to apologise before military cooperation President Lee Jae Myung says Tokyo must offer a genuine apology before a military logistics pact can move forward 3-MIN READ3-MIN South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has ruled out expanding military ties with Japan any time soon, insisting that historical grievances must be resolved first. The two countries have come under growing pressure to strengthen defence ties as North Korea, China and Russia draw closer...

Advertisement South Korea tells Japan to apologise before military cooperation President Lee Jae Myung says Tokyo must offer a genuine apology before a military logistics pact can move forward 3-MIN READ3-MIN South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has ruled out expanding military ties with Japan any time soon, insisting that historical grievances must be resolved first. The two countries have come under growing pressure to strengthen defence ties as North Korea, China and Russia draw closer together. But analysts say such a move remains politically risky for Lee’s government given deep-seated public resentment in South Korea towards Japan. To explain why his country could not yet embrace military cooperation with Japan, Lee likened it to a man being punched and hospitalised before being asked by his attacker to shake hands and move on. Advertisement “Can I simply get along with them because it is necessary?” Lee asked at a press conference on Monday marking his first year in office. “In order to become real friends, that attacker would need to say, ‘I’m genuinely sorry … it must have hurt you … I promise I will never do it again,’” he said. Advertisement Advertisement Select Voice Select Speed 1.00x
South Korea (LOCATION) Japan (LOCATION) Lee Jae Myung (PERSON) Tokyo (LOCATION) South Korean (ORG) North Korea (LOCATION) China (LOCATION) Russia (LOCATION) Lee (PERSON) Advertisement Advertisement Select Voice Select Speed (ORG)
Originally published by South China Morning Post Read original →