Posts By Scott Snyder
A Rising Need for U.S.-Japan-China Trilateral Dialogue
February 16, 2011
Coinciding with Chinese President Hu Jintao’s official state visit to Washington last month, The Asia Foundation held a two-day dialogue in Tokyo with the Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA) and the China Institute for International Studies (CIIS) to examine the state of U.S.-Japan-China relations.
Topics: Regional Cooperation
Shaky Restart to Inter-Korean Talks
February 9, 2011
Less than three months after North Korea’s shelling of South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island, North and South Korea opened preliminary, colonel-level talks yesterday to set an agenda and date for ministerial-level defense talks. However, the talks adjourned without reaching an agreement, raising questions about prospects for renewed diplomacy…
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: Korea | North Korea
Hu-Obama Summit: Implications for Managing North Korea
February 2, 2011
Both North and South Koreans appear to have had disproportionately high expectations in the run-up to last week’s Hu-Obama summit, judging from their reluctant willingness to edge toward tension reduction and dialogue following the November 23rd Yeonpyeong Island artillery shelling…
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: China | Korea | North Korea
China’s Rise and the U.S.-ROK Security Alliance
January 5, 2011
The East Asia Institute has just published my critique of an earlier paper by Dong Sun Lee and Sung Eun Kim, which concludes that ratification of the KORUS FTA will not “markedly reinforce” the U.S.-ROK security alliance. I agree with that conclusion, but I think that the KORUS FTA provides an important strategic message of [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: Korea
China’s Call for Six Party Talks: Cynical or Naïve?
December 1, 2010
China’s response to North Korea’s artillery shelling of South Korea’s Yeonpyeong Island last week has been relatively rapid compared to the slowness of its response to the sinking last March (it took three weeks for the Chinese government to express its condolences in response to the sinking of the Cheonan). But, as underscored in Sunday’s [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: Korea | North Korea
Obama in Seoul: Underscoring the Sino-U.S. Gap on North Korea
November 17, 2010
Although the main stories of the Obama visit to Korea revolved around the gap between the United States and China on global rebalancing issues at the G-20 and the failure of Presidents Obama and Lee to tee up the KORUS FTA, a third issue arose that dramatizes Sino-U.S. differences over the Korean peninsula. At a [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: Korea
UN Sanctions and their Impact on North Korea
October 27, 2010
The Office of Senator Richard Lugar has released the latest Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on implementation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1874, along with a statement that “the findings include a stark reminder that U.S. and China interests regarding North Korea are largely incongruent. While the United States presses for elimination of North Korea’s [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy | Regional Cooperation
Countries: Korea | North Korea
Apparent Heir: Kim Jong Un’s Ascension and the Challenge to South Korea
October 13, 2010
Having spent the past week in Seoul in the aftermath of the September 28 Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) conference and on the eve of the unprecedented 65th anniversary celebrations of the WPK’s founding, I was struck by just how few facts South Korean analysts (and the rest of the world!) yet have at their [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: Korea | North Korea
YaleGlobal: North Korea’s Succession Poses New Challenges
October 6, 2010
Ten years ago, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, or North Korea, snubbed China’s defense minister on the 50th anniversary of the entry of the Chinese people’s volunteers into the Korean War: Instead, Kim Jong Il hosted the first-ever visit by a U.S. secretary of state, Madeleine Albright. A mirror image of that snub was [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy
Countries: Korea
The Cheonan Incident and its Impact on Regional Security
September 1, 2010
I spent last week at several meetings in Tokyo, Seoul, and Jeju that revolved around the Cheonan incident and its implications for regional security. The Lee Myung-Bak administration got high marks for its handling of the immediate aftermath of the incident. It is important to remember that in the hours following the Cheonan’s sinking on [...]
Topics: Center for U.S.-Korea Policy | Regional Cooperation
Countries: Korea | North Korea

Last week in Nay Pyi Taw, H.E. U Zin Yaw, Myanmar’s Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Asia Foundation President