Book contents
- Divided America, Divided Korea
- Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations
- Divided America, Divided Korea
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Table
- Additional material
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Trump Administration’s Place in the History of US Relations with the Korean Peninsula
- 2 Plus Ça Change? South Korean Public Opinion of the US during the Trump Administration
- 3 The Trumpian Wake-Up Call
- 4 North Korean Human Rights during the Trump Administration
- 5 South Korean Public Diplomacy vis-à-vis the US
- 6 Stunted Growth or Growing Pains
- 7 Inflection Points
- 8 How to Make Friends and Alienate People
- Conclusion
- Index
1 - The Trump Administration’s Place in the History of US Relations with the Korean Peninsula
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2024
- Divided America, Divided Korea
- Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations
- Divided America, Divided Korea
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Table
- Additional material
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Trump Administration’s Place in the History of US Relations with the Korean Peninsula
- 2 Plus Ça Change? South Korean Public Opinion of the US during the Trump Administration
- 3 The Trumpian Wake-Up Call
- 4 North Korean Human Rights during the Trump Administration
- 5 South Korean Public Diplomacy vis-à-vis the US
- 6 Stunted Growth or Growing Pains
- 7 Inflection Points
- 8 How to Make Friends and Alienate People
- Conclusion
- Index
Summary
This chapter offers a brief overview of US relations with the Korean Peninsula from the late nineteenth century through the Trump administration to provide a historical framework for understanding the chapters that follow. While laying out this framework, this chapter also advances the argument that the policies of the Trump administration toward the Korean Peninsula were not the dramatic breaks with the past the administration often claimed they were. President Trump was hardly the first American president to be skeptical of the US alliance with the ROK and attempt to change it – though the bluntness with which he did this was unprecedented. While Trump’s three meetings with Kim Jong-un could rightly be called historic in a narrow sense, there is ample evidence they were just the latest installment of what some scholars refer to as “entrepreneurial diplomacy” with the DPRK. In the broader historical context of US relations with the Korean Peninsula, President Trump’s policies toward the ROK and the DPRK appear more as variations on a theme than dramatic breaks with the past.
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- Information
- Divided America, Divided KoreaThe US and Korea During and After the Trump Years, pp. 7 - 36Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024