South Korean’s Visit to Disputed Islets Angers Japan
South Korea — President Lee Myung-bak of South Korea flew to a set of islets locked in a territorial dispute with Japan on Friday, dismissing protests from Tokyo and making a trip that was bound to heighten diplomatic tensions between Washington’s two key Asian allies.
Japan called Mr. Lee’s visit “unacceptable” and recalled its ambassador
from Seoul in protest, Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reporters in
Tokyo.
Adding drama to the simmering historical hostility
that Mr. Lee’s surprise trip magnified, South Korea and Japan were set
to clash in London on Friday for the Olympic bronze medal in men’s
soccer, a game to be watched by millions of people in both countries.
Although South Korean cabinet ministers and national legislators had
previously visited the barely inhabitable volcanic outcroppings in the
sea between Korea and Japan, Mr. Lee was the first South Korean
president to travel there to highlight his country’s territorial
control. A squadron of armed South Korean police officers have manned
the islets, called Dokdo in Korea and Takeshima in Japan, since the
1950s. An elderly fishing couple also lives there with government
support.
“Dokdo is truly our territory, and it’s worth defending with our lives,”
Mr. Lee told the police officers, according to the national news agency
Yonhap, whose reporter accompanied the presidential entourage.
With his popularity plummeting amid corruption scandals implicating his
associates, Mr. Lee is badly in need of a boost to his political
leverage. Opposition politicians were quick to accuse him of making the
unprecedented presidential trip to tap South Koreans’ deep-seated
nationalistic sentiments against Japan for gains in domestic politics.
Although Mr. Lee is banned by law from seeking re-election in the
presidential vote scheduled for December, his governing party feared
being labeled “pro-Japanese” so much that it forced his government in
June to postpone the signing of an agreement to share classified
military data with its rival.
The dispute over the islets remains one of the most contentious
unresolved issues from Japan’s often brutal colonial rule of the Korean
Peninsula from 1910 until its World War II defeat in 1945.
Mr. Lee made Friday’s trip by helicopter, staying 70 minutes on the main
islet and sharing pizza and chicken with the police guards, Yonhap
reported.
His trip came after Japan angered South Koreans by reconfirming its
territorial claim to the islets in its new defense white paper published
late last month. Mr. Lee is scheduled to deliver his last major
national speech as president on Wednesday, which South Korea celebrates
as a major national holiday observing Japan’s World War II surrender and
Korea’s liberation.
The islets are surrounded by rich fishing grounds and natural gas
deposits. South Koreans also hold deep emotional attachment to the
rocks. To them, Japan’s territorial claim epitomizes Japan’s early
20th-century aggression and what they consider its refusal to atone for
its colonial occupation of Korea, during which Koreans were banned from
using their Korean names and language.
The two countries are also divided over compensation for Korean women
who historians said were forced or cheated into working as sex slaves
for the Japanese military during World War II. In July, a South Korean
man rammed his light truck into the main gate of the Japanese Embassy in
Seoul.
Mr. Lee’s government said his trip was intended to counter Japan’s
increasingly pronounced campaign to highlight its territorial claim to
the islets. Last year, three Japanese lawmakers who wanted to visit the
islets to advertise their country’s claim were denied entry to South
Korea.
“We encourage good relations between both of our allies,” said Patrick
Ventrell, acting deputy spokesman of the United States State Department.
While Mr. Lee was visiting the islets, South Korean prosecutors
announced that they had indicted a former aide to the president on
charges of accepting bribes from a banker. He was the latest in a series
of relatives and political allies of Mr. Lee to be indicted on
corruption charges.
Asian Defence News
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