http://wikileaks.org/cable/2008/05/08SEOUL1058.html
Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
08SEOUL1058 | 2008-05-23 07:29 | 2011-08-30 01:44 | CONFIDENTIAL | Embassy Seoul |
VZCZCXYZ0001
PP RUEHWEB
DE RUEHUL #1058/01 1440729
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 230729Z MAY 08
FM AMEMBASSY SEOUL
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 0134
INFO RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 4331
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 8748
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 4472
RHMFISS/COMUSFK SEOUL KOR
RHMFISS/COMUSKOREA J5 SEOUL KOR
RUACAAA/COMUSKOREA INTEL SEOUL KOR
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHINGTON DC
RHHMUNA/CDR USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC//OSD/ISA/EAP//
C O N F I D E N T I A L SEOUL 001058
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: AFTER KOREAN REUNIFICATION
TAGS: PGOV PREL KS KN
SUBJECT: FORMER FM SONG: PHASED APPROACH FOR BEEF IS THE
BEST SOLUTION
Classified By: Amb. Alexander Vershbow. Reasons 1.4(b/d)
¶1. (C) SUMMARY: In a May 22 luncheon meeting with the
Ambassador, National Assembly member-elect (and former
Foreign Minister) Song Min-soon said that it was up to the
U.S. to find a way out of the current beef situation and
recommended a phased opening of the beef market (as the Roh
administration had proposed late last year) as the only way
to assuage the liberal United Democratic Party’s (UDP)
concerns. Song said that Koreans were caught off guard at
the abrupt announcement of the reopening of the Korean market
to U.S. beef and were concerned that the necessary safety
measures were not included in the agreement. If their
concerns about beef were not addressed, Song said that the
UDP would be forced to oppose ratification of the KORUS FTA,
despite many members’ support for the agreement. Turning to
North Korea, Song said that the DPRK might be willing to make
a deal with the U.S. while President Bush was in office to
move forward on phase three of the denuclearization agreement
if the terms were “very good,” but they were more likely to
wait for a new U.S. administration. On South Korea’s
relations with the North, Song said that he perceived a
discrepancy between President Lee’s approach to the North and
the harder-line views of the Blue House staff — a difference
that Kim Jong-il would try to exploit to the fullest. END
SUMMARY.
——————————————–
BEEF SOLUTION SHOULD INCLUDE PHASED APPROACH
——————————————–
¶2. (C) In a luncheon meeting with the Ambassador on May 22,
National Assembly member-elect (and former Foreign Minister)
Song Min-soon said that he was tactfully working to prevent
the current beef issue from becoming an anti-U.S. issue.
According to Song, Koreans felt that the beef agreement
appeared to be a hastily concluded deal designed to pave the
way for a positive summit between the two Presidents. Song
quoted Gordon Hewitt, a British judge, who said “justice
should not only be done, but also clearly be seen as being
done,” to illustrate how Koreans felt ignored in the run-up
to the final beef agreement. Most Koreans were caught off
guard because they expected a phased approach that would
first open the Korean market to U.S. beef less than 30 months
of age, with beef over 30 months of age being approved at a
later date. This, Song said, would allow time for broader
safety concerns to subside. The Ambassador explained that
there was no scientific basis for a two-stage approach; while
such an approach might have worked last year, we needed a
full market opening to ensure FTA ratification this year in
the U.S. Congress.
¶3. (C) Song said that he had tried to lay the groundwork for
a successful beef agreement during his tenure as Foreign
Minister. When he talked with members of Lee Myung-bak’s
transition team and suggested that they hold a special
meeting with ROKG officials to discuss the handling of the
beef issue, Song said his suggestions fell on deaf ears.
Instead, the new administration just “punched their way into
office” and were unwilling to heed outside advice, Song
lamented. Song recounted President Roh’s phone conversation
with President Bush March 29, 2007, when the two discussed
the way forward on beef on the eve of the conclusion of the
KORUS FTA negotiations on April 2. According to Song,
President Roh told President Bush that after the OIE made its
ruling, U.S. beef would not be treated unfairly in the Korean
market. He pointed out that the uproar over the April 18
agreement was due in part to the agreement going further than
Roh had pledged without sufficient explanation. Song said
that President Roh had planned to resolve the issue by the
end of 2007 in a manner that would not appear as though the
U.S. had “strong-armed” Korea into the deal, but he was
unable to do so. (COMMENT: This seriously downgrades what Roh
actually promised in March 2007, which was to “respect” the
OIG’s scientific guidelines. END COMMENT)
————————-
BEEF LINKAGE TO KORUS FTA
————————-
¶4. (C) Song said that although the beef deal may have helped
the KORUS FTA’s prospects in the U.S., it was having the
opposite effect in Korea. Song said that beef and the FTA
should not be linked and that they had been dealt with
separately up until now. The Ambassador said that the U.S.
had agreed not to include beef market opening in the FTA, but
to treat it as a matter of food safety, on the understanding
that it would be resolved on the basis of science and fact.
If the U.S. were to now change the agreement based on other
factors, U.S. industry representatives were likely to reject
the deal, and businesses across the board would lose trust in
the reliability of doing business with Korea.
¶5. (C) Without changing the beef deal to include a phased
approach that would allow the UDP to get behind the deal and
save face, Song said that the UDP was not likely to support
the FTA. “A vote for the FTA has been turned into a vote for
the beef agreement,” which UDP members could not support,
even those who had long favored the FTA. Song inquired if
Korea’s ratification of the FTA was a requisite for U.S.
passage. The Ambassador responded that it was not a
necessary condition but it would force the U.S. Congress to
take a more serious look at the agreement and preempt calls
to renegotiate the automobile chapter.
—————————————
PROSPECTS OF NORTH KOREA DENUCLEARIZING
—————————————
¶6. (C) Song said that the DPRK wanted to get de-listed from
the list of State Sponsors of Terrorism and was therefore
willing to move forward and provide a complete declaration of
its nuclear materials and programs. Momentum created by this
declaration would likely slow as talks began on
denuclearization issues in phase three, as the level of DPRK
commitment becomes “much steeper” at that point. Despite
this challenge, Song said that the DPRK might accept a deal
with the current U.S. administration to move forward with
phase three of the February 2007 agreement if the terms of
the deal were “very good.” This said, Song thought that Kim
Jong-il was nervous to step into uncharted waters of giving
up his plutonium or allowing a U.S. Embassy to be opened in
Pyongyang, and he was likely to continue negotiating while
waiting to see who would become the next U.S. president.
—————————
ROK POLICY TOWARD THE NORTH
—————————
¶7. (C) Song characterized President Lee’s lack of willingness
to listen to members of the previous administration by
saying, “there is no one more blind than those who do not
want to see.” Song said that he advised members of President
Lee’s transition team “not to step too far out on a limb with
regard to North Korea policy.” Despite his advice, Song
judged the Lee team had gone too far and was having a hard
time “getting back to the trunk of the tree.” Song said that
in his discussions with the transition team he perceived a
discrepancy between President Lee’s approach to the North and
the harder-line views of the Blue House staff — a difference
that Kim Jong-il would try to exploit to the fullest. For
now, Korea should focus on denuclearization and let the dust
settle on North-South relations. Once the dust settled, the
way forward would be clearer, Song said.
¶8. (C) According to Song, Koreans wanted to see quick
progress in relations with the North and each Korean
president also should have the goal of advancing dramatically
the relations between the Koreas or, “he should not be
president.” President Lee’s Administration was already
“under attack” by the people to do more in support of North
Korea, especially in light of the U.S. announcement that it
would provide food aid to the North. South Korea felt that
it should be the “master” of the North and when another
country gets ahead of the South, the Korean people get
concerned.
——-
COMMENT
——-
¶9. (C) Song is a savvy politician despite his protestations
that he did not know Yeoido or how to navigate in the
political world. He proved this as he rose through the ranks
in the Roh administration despite being a “U.S. hand.” He
has already done much to earn his spurs in the UDP by
engineering the political attack on the Ambassador, and thus
the U.S., over a May 21 phone call between UDP Chair Sohn
Hak-kyu and the Ambassador. A longtime U.S. expert known for
his aggressive negotiating style, Song is likely to be a
formidable opponent of the ROKG and at times the U.S. as he
works his way up the political ladder. Assembly sources tell
us he will likely be on the Defense Committee.
VERSHBOW