Korean Endgame

Regular price €62.99
A01=Selig S. Harrison
Adviser
Anti-Americanism
Armistice
Author_Selig S. Harrison
Beijing
Bruce Cumings
Category=GTM
Category=JPS
Chairman
China
China-United States relations
Chun Doo-hwan
Cold War
Division of Korea
East Asia
Economic sanctions
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Foreign policy
Great power
Japan-United States relations
Japanese invasions of Korea (1592-98)
Juche
Kim Dae-jung
Kim Il-sung
Kim Young-sam
Korea
Korea under Japanese rule
Korean conflict
Korean nationalism
Korean Peninsula
Korean People's Army
Korean reunification
Korean War
Koreans
Liberalization
Manchuria
Military alliance
Military strategy
National security
North Korea
North Korea-South Korea relations
Northeast Asia
Nuclear arms race
Nuclear power
Nuclear proliferation
Nuclear reactor
Nuclear umbrella
Nuclear warfare
Nuclear weapon
Nuclear-free zone
Park Chung-hee
Peace treaty
Pyongyang
Rogue state
Sakhalin
Seoul
South Korea
South Korea-United States relations
Soviet Union
Subsidy
Sunshine Policy
Superiority (short story)
Supreme People's Assembly
Syngman Rhee
Tactical nuclear weapon
Technology
Totalitarianism
Treaty
Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan
United States
United States Department of State
United States national missile defense
War
World War II

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691116266
  • Weight: 652g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Aug 2003
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Nearly half a century after the fighting stopped, the 1953 Armistice has yet to be replaced with a peace treaty formally ending the Korean War. While Russia and China withdrew the last of their forces in 1958, the United States maintains 37,000 troops in South Korea and is pledged to defend it with nuclear weapons. In Korean Endgame, Selig Harrison mounts the first authoritative challenge to this long-standing U.S. policy. Harrison shows why North Korea is not--as many policymakers expect--about to collapse. And he explains why existing U.S. policies hamper North-South reconciliation and reunification. Assessing North Korean capabilities and the motivations that have led to its forward deployments, he spells out the arms control concessions by North Korea, South Korea, and the United States necessary to ease the dangers of confrontation, centering on reciprocal U.S. force redeployments and U.S. withdrawals in return for North Korean pullbacks from the thirty-eighth parallel. Similarly, he proposes specific trade-offs to forestall the North's development of nuclear weapons and missile delivery systems, calling for the withdrawal of the U.S. nuclear umbrella in conjunction with agreements to denuclearize Korea embracing China, Russia, and Japan. The long-term goal of U.S. policy, he argues, should be the full disengagement of U.S. combat forces from Korea as part of regional agreements insulating the peninsula from all foreign conventional and nuclear forces. A veteran journalist with decades of extensive firsthand knowledge of North Korea and long-standing contacts with leaders in Washington, Seoul, and Pyongyang, Harrison is perfectly placed to make these arguments. Throughout, he supports his analysis with revealing accounts of conversations with North Korean, South Korean, and U.S. leaders over thirty-five years. Combining probing scholarship with a seasoned reporter's on-the-ground experience and insights, he has given us the definitive book on U.S. policy in Korea--past, present, and future.
Selig S. Harrison is a former "Washington Post" Bureau Chief in Northeast Asia and the author of five books about the continent. He served as Senior Fellow and Director of Asian Studies at the Brookings Institution and, for twenty-two years, as a Senior Associate of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He has visited North Korea seven times and met the late President Kim Il Sung twice. He played a key role in setting the stage for the 1994 U.S. nuclear freeze agreement with Pyongyang.