President Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in met to discuss a joint policy



As President Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-in met to discuss a joint policy dealing with nuclear threats from North Korea, one global political risk expert, Ian Bremmer, said Friday on "CBS This Morning" that "South Korea is in the most challenging geopolitical situation right now of any developing country in the world."
One of the big reasons has to do with China's relationship with both South Korea and the U.S."South Korea, before the impeachment of President Park [Geun-hye], was getting squeezed with heavy sanctions from China because they were working more closely with the United States on North Korea, supporting this THAAD missile defense system," said Bremmer, founder and president of Eurasia Group. "Now this new
opposition, liberal opposition party leader President Moon that's just been elected, he says, 'I want to talk to the North Koreans.' He's more interested in the Sunshine Policy and he absolutely wants to push back on the Americans so that the China economic relationship can go well again. It's incredibly hard to balance these things."
While South Korea may want to patch its relations with China, Washington's approach to Beijing have shifted in the last few days.
"We now have yesterday's sanctions against the Chinese bank, two individuals and a corporation because of engagement with North Korea. That's new," Bremmer said. "We have the intention of putting steel sanctions against the will of a lot of the cabinet, against a lot of countries, most importantly China. We have the new $1.4 billion military deal to the Taiwanese which in the last 24 hours the Chinese have strongly protested against. All the while, the North Korea relationship is getting worse."
All these factors will "make it much harder" for the various countries to deal with North Korea, Bremmer noted, especially as the regime is expanding its nuclear, cyber and missile capabilities.

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