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Politics & Power Quote by Kim Dae Jung

"So such an American troops presence in Korea in the South and Japan, total some 100,000 should stay there forever, even after unification of Korean peninsula"

About this Quote

A lifetime dissident turned president, Kim Dae Jung knew that peace on the Korean peninsula isn’t a fairy-tale ending; it’s a security architecture problem. The bluntness of “should stay there forever” is the tell. He’s not celebrating foreign troops as a sentimental symbol of alliance. He’s trying to lock in a stabilizing constraint on everyone’s worst impulses, especially in the foggy, high-stakes aftermath of unification.

Context matters: Kim was the architect of the Sunshine Policy, a leader willing to gamble on engagement with the North while still fearing what a sudden strategic vacuum could invite. Unification wouldn’t erase geography: Korea sits between major powers with long memories and sharper interests. By tying Korea’s future to a continued US presence not just in the South but also Japan, Kim is quietly recasting unification as a regional issue, not a purely Korean triumph. The subtext reads like a warning to neighbors and domestic nationalists alike: don’t mistake sovereignty for solitude.

The intent is also political triage. He’s preempting the predictable post-unification demand to “send the Americans home,” which could spook investors, unsettle military planning, and tempt brinkmanship from actors recalibrating influence. “Forever” is rhetorical overkill deployed for a practical goal: signal permanence long enough to prevent miscalculation. It’s Kim’s realist punchline to idealism - unification, yes; strategic naivete, no.

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TopicPeace
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Permanent American Troops in Korea and Japan: Kim Dae Jung
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Kim Dae Jung

Kim Dae Jung (December 3, 1925 - August 18, 2009) was a Leader from South Korea.

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