South Korea Scrapping Intel Pact Strains US Alliance

South Korea Scrapping Intel Pact Strains US Alliance

South Korea’s decision to end a military intelligence sharing pact with Japan won’t necessarily have an immediate impact on regional security, but the move could challenge the U.S.-South Korea alliance at a particularly tense moment, analysts warn, VOA news reports.

South Korea announced Thursday it does not plan to renew the intelligence sharing agreement, escalating Seoul’s bitter trade dispute that is rooted in historical tensions with its colonial occupier Japan.

The move was a blow for the United States, which helped negotiate the deal in hopes it would allow South Korea and Japan to work more closely on challenges including North Korea, China, and Russia.

Japan and South Korea will still technically be able to share military intelligence without the agreement, signed in late 2016. But the process will be more difficult and possibly slower, with much of the intelligence now likely passing first through the United States.

That could hamper cooperation in a crisis. It could also complicate efforts to monitor North Korean provocations at a particularly tense time; North Korea has conducted eight short-range missile launches since May and has threatened to resume nuclear or long-range missile tests.

But the biggest immediate impact could be how the decision affects relations between South Korea and the United States, which next month will begin another contentious round of negotiations over how to share the cost of the U.S. military presence in South Korea.

“This is not a matter of life and death,” says Bong Young-shik with Yonsei University’s Institute for North Korean Studies in Seoul. “But it greatly undermines the credibility of South Korea as a security partner in the eyes of the United States.”

‘Strong concern and disappointment’

Senior U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Defense Secretary Mark Esper, had publicly expressed hope South Korea would renew the deal. Japan also supported renewing it.

On Thursday, Pompeo said he was “disappointed” in South Korea’s decision. The Pentagon went further, expressing “strong concern and disappointment” that South Korea refused to renew the agreement.

“We’ll continue to pursue bilateral and trilateral defense and security cooperation where possible with Japan and (South Korea),” said a Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Col. Dave Eastburn.

In a statement Friday, South Korea’s deputy national security adviser insisted Seoul “maintained close communications with the United States” as it reviewed the deal.

“The ROK government will work to ensure that the latest decision will serve to not weaken the ROK-U.S. alliance, but actually upgrade the alliance so that it becomes even more solid,” said Kim Hyun-chong, using the abbreviation for South Korea’s official acronym.

South Korean police officers stand near a banner during a rally demanding the South Korean government cancel the General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) with Japan, in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Aug. 22, 2019.
Police officers stand near a banner during a rally demanding the South Korean government cancel the General Security of Military Information Agreement (GSOMIA) with Japan, in front of the Japanese embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Aug. 22, 2019.

Instead, he said South Korea will actively use a trilateral information sharing channel, with the United States as the intermediary.

What is GSOMIA? 

The bilateral intel-sharing pact – called the General Security of Military Information Agreement, or GSOMIA for short – did not actually require intelligence sharing between South Korea and Japan.

Instead, the document, which is five pages in English, served as a framework for when the two sides did decide to share sensitive information, mainly outlining procedures such as who could access the data and how it should be destroyed.

It isn’t clear how often South Korea and Japan shared information under GSOMIA. But regardless, it still helped complement each others’ shortcomings when it came to common challenges like North Korea, analysts say.

“It’s not just symbolic. Both sides have much to gain,” says Sung-Yoon Lee, a Korea expert at Tufts University’s Fletcher School.

For instance, Japan offers the ability to monitor North Korea using more sophisticated satellites, radar, and surveillance planes, while South Korea is believed to have the edge when it comes to spies and other human resources.

“There will definitely be an impact on military and intelligence operations,” says David Maxwell, a former U.S. special forces colonel in the U.S. Army, who served in South Korea.

“With the U.S. acting as the middleman, information flow will be slower,” says Maxwell, now with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “And, of course, this plays into [North Korean leader] Kim Jong Un’s – and Chinese and Russian – hands to disrupt U.S. alliances.”

Cost-sharing negotiations

Some in Seoul fear the timing is especially bad, speculating U.S. President Donald Trump may use the issue to gain leverage against South Korea in upcoming cost-sharing negotiations.

“By walking away from GSOMIA, South Korea becomes more vulnerable to pressure from the U.S. to pay more for its own national defense, including assuming more portion of defense costs and deploying its own troops to guard civilian vessels in the Strait of Hormuz,” says Yonsei University’s Young-shik.

“It’s a give and take. Since South Korea has folded one of its bargaining cards with the U.S., its bargaining position has been weakened,” he says.

Protesters hold candles and signs during a rally denouncing Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and also demanding the South Korean government cancel its GSOMIA agreement with Japan, in downtown Seoul, South Korea, Aug. 15, 2019.
Protesters hold candles and signs during a rally denouncing Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and also demanding the South Korean government cancel its GSOMIA agreement with Japan, in downtown Seoul, South Korea, Aug. 15, 2019.

Trump has recently intensified his long-standing complaints that South Korea and other U.S. allies aren’t paying enough for the cost of U.S. troops on their soil.

Earlier this month, Trump tweeted that South Korea had agreed to pay “substantially more” for the U.S. military presence. Seoul shot back, saying the talks hadn’t even begun.

Trump’s treatment of the U.S.-South Korean alliance has already provoked a small but intense backlash among South Korean conservatives, who were already skeptical of his outreach to North Korea.

Trump hasn’t yet responded to Seoul’s decision on GSOMIA.

Mintaro Oba, a former State Department diplomat who focused on the Koreas, doubts the Trump administration will make a deliberate decision to impose costs on South Korea in response to GSOMIA. But there are inevitable side effects when there is “major friction in an alliance,” he says.

“I would speculate this will strengthen this administration’s lean toward Japan and favoring of Japanese positions in Korea-Japan disputes, and result in a less cooperative U.S. stance on alliance issues across the board – from cost-sharing talks to North Korea policy coordination,” he says.