Seoul has gradually adopted a more outspoken position regarding the importance of peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait and framed it in increasingly expansive terms—as a regional and global issue yet also directly linked to the peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula. Nevertheless, the U.S.-ROK alliance faces a gap between such rhetoric and its political, military, and operational preparedness to navigate an actual conflict between the United States and China over Taiwan and the attendant risk of a simultaneous conflict in Korea.
KEI Fellow and Director of Academic Affairs, Clint Work, sat down to discuss his recent Korea Policy paper, Rhetoric vs. Reality: Seoul & Washington’s Strategic Alignment on Taiwan, with Markus Garlauskas, director of the Indo-Pacific Security Initiative of the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security.
What are Domestic Politics Doing to the U.S.-Korea Alliance?
Charting China’s Use of Armed Coercion: James Siebens (Part 2)
Charting China’s Use of Armed Coercion: James Siebens (Part 1)
Where are North Korea's Relations with Russia Headed?
The U.S.-ROK-DPRK Strategic Triangle in the Indo-Pacific Era
How Can Korea and Australia Cooperate in the Indo-Pacific?
Energy Insecurity: How Resource-Poor Korea and Japan Powered Their Economies
The Costs of War: Deepening North Korea-Russia Ties
Economic Security and U.S.-China Competition: The View From North Korea
Korea’s Cultural Wave: The Story Behind the Strength
South Korea: Caught in the Crosshairs of U.S. China Competition Over Semiconductors
The ROK-U.S. Alliance at 70: Expanding Diplomatic Horizons Through Public Diplomacy
What We Know and Don’t Know about North Korea
From K-Pop to K-Beauty: KEI at KCON
South Korea and Global Public Health Beyond the Pandemic: Dr. Jerome Kim
Building Trilateral Momentum: The U.S.-Korea-Japan Summit
The Challenges of Implementing Sanctions on North Korea: An Expert’s Perspective
Democracy and Duty in Korea: Aram Hur
Humanizing Korea: E. Tammy Kim
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free