Key Issues At Stake In Trump-Lee Summit In South Korea
Key Issues At Stake In Trump-Lee Summit In South Korea
Homepage   /    business   /    Key Issues At Stake In Trump-Lee Summit In South Korea

Key Issues At Stake In Trump-Lee Summit In South Korea

Thomson Reuters 🕒︎ 2025-10-31

Copyright republicworld

Key Issues At Stake In Trump-Lee Summit In South Korea

South Korean President Lee Jae Myung sits down with US President Donald Trump for the second time in two months on Wednesday, with crucial trade and security issues that could chart the future of their 72-year alliance at stake.The following are some issues that are likely to top the agenda of their talks ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Gyeongju, South Korea, which Trump is not expected to attend.South Korea's hope to finalise a deal on cutting US import duties on South Korean goods during Trump's visit this week appears all but dashed, as negotiators for the two sides remain deadlocked over a $350 billion investment pledge by Seoul.Initially heralded by South Korea as a monumental commitment that could help the US rebuild its manufacturing industries, the demand by Trump for South Korea to pay the total in cash or equity "up front" has upended the preliminary deal.South Korean officials have said the plan was for the bulk of the $350 billion in investment to be in the form of loans and loan guarantees to South Korean companies setting up new facilities in the US.South Korea's Lee has said such a cash outlay would destabilise the country's financial markets.Trump has argued that countries such as South Korea should pay more for the cost of US military presence - roughly 10 times the 1.5 trillion won ($1.06 billion) that was agreed by the allies for 2026.Trump has also demanded that US allies, including the EU, spend 3.5% of their GDP on defence. South Korea's defence cost is currently 2.3% of GDP.South Korea plans to increase its defence spending by 8.3% for 2026, more than double the increase for this year.US officials have hinted at the idea of broadening the role of the 28,500 U.S. troops from a focus on countering North Korea to responding to security tensions with China's rise as a major military power.South Korea is looking to revise an agreement with the US on nuclear energy to win approval from Washington to reprocess spent nuclear fuel and enrich uranium for purely civilian energy purposes.While Seoul and Washington are formally in agreement on the goal of dismantling North Korea's nuclear weapons programme, Trump has said Pyongyang was already a "nuclear power," hinting at the idea of abandoning denuclearisation.ee has made it a top priority to bring Pyongyang back to dialogue and said Trump was the ideal person to entice North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.Trump has boasted of his three summits with Kim during his first term and has expressed willingness to meet him during this week's trip to the region.North Korea has not responded, although Kim has said he has "fond memories" of Trump from their previous meetings.The United States has pledged to improve South Korean workers' access to visas that would allow them to work in the US to set up and manage business facilities invested in by South Korean companies.The promise, which Trump has backed, follows the arrests of more than 300 South Korean workers by US immigration authorities at a Hyundai Motor facility in the US, which stunned South Korean officials and the public. The discussions have yet to yield a concrete resolution to South Korean businesses, which have resorted to a grey area in the US immigration process.

Guess You Like

Missoula feral horses have neighborhood seeking solutions
Missoula feral horses have neighborhood seeking solutions
David Erickson is the business...
2025-10-23