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[광우병] 위키리크스, TURBULENT TIMES FOR PRESIDENT LEE: CAN HE RECOVER?

http://wikileaks.org/cable/2008/06/08SEOUL1204.html














Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08SEOUL1204 2008-06-16 10:04 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy Seoul
VZCZCXRO0164
RR RUEHCHI RUEHDT RUEHHM RUEHNH
DE RUEHUL #1204/01 1681004
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 161004Z JUN 08
FM AMEMBASSY SEOUL
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0437
INFO RUCNASE/ASEAN MEMBER COLLECTIVE
RUEHBJ/AMEMBASSY BEIJING 4415
RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO 4548
RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 8789
RUEHNO/USMISSION USNATO 0226
RUEHBS/USEU BRUSSELS
RHHMUNA/CDR USPACOM HONOLULU HI
RUALSFJ/COMUSJAPAN YOKOTA AB JA
RUACAAA/COMUSKOREA INTEL SEOUL KOR
RHMFISS/COMUSKOREA J5 SEOUL KOR
RHMFISS/COMUSKOREA SCJS SEOUL KOR
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHINGTON DC
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC//OSD/ISA/EAP//
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 SEOUL 001204 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/16/2018
TAGS: PGOV PREL PINR KS KN
SUBJECT: TURBULENT TIMES FOR PRESIDENT LEE: CAN HE RECOVER?

REF: A. SEOUL 001145
B. SEOUL 001153
C. SEOUL 001174

Classified By: AMB Alexander S. Vershbow. Reasons 1.4 (b,d).

1. (C) SUMMARY: President Lee Myung-bak is only four months
into his five-year term in office and already he has hit
historically low popularity ratings of around 10 percent.
Lee’s first 100 days have been a crash course in political
reality. The public’s disappointment with the new
administration’s handling of state affairs and perception
that the Blue House disregards public opinion have virtually
crippled the administration, and the six weeks of candlelight
vigils have paralyzed decision-making, raising real concerns
about Korea’s governability in the years ahead. Bitter
intra-party feuding and an opposition with nothing to lose
have all made it harder for President Lee to exert control.
Over the past month, the decision to restart imports of U.S.
beef has become the vehicle through which South Koreans are
expressing their anger. President Lee cannot rebuild his
credibility until this storm passes, and we need to help Lee
defuse the beef issue without crossing our red lines. We
should also help vindicate his original decision on beef by
making an all-out effort to get the KORUS FTA ratified by
Congress by year end.

2. (C) Even then, Lee will find it difficult to make
progress on his domestic agenda or on a host of potentially
controversial alliance issues, including the Special Measures
Agreement (SMA) negotiations, camp returns, USFK relocation,
and possibly FTA ratification by the National Assembly.
Efforts to promote robust ROK participation in international
efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as the Proliferation
Security Initiative (PSI) are also likely to become much more
difficult for the foreseeable future. Even if we weather
this storm, we may need to lower expectations for the “21st
Century Alliance,” since Lee will be a crippled leader for
some time to come. END SUMMARY.

————————
Problems Out of the Gate
————————

3. (C) Lee used his CEO instincts to staff the cabinet and
the Blue House with the “best of the best” but instead he
brought in an elite team that was derided from the get-go for
their patrician credentials. Even before taking office, Lee
was criticized for his cabinet choices, as many of his
nominees came from wealthy backgrounds — most were members
of Lee’s church, alumni of his alma mater Korea University,
and from his home province of Gyeongsang. According to a
mandatory disclosure report for government officials, members
of Lee’s cabinet were almost twice as wealthy as their
predecessors. Progressive press began to sow doubts that Lee
genuinely had the average South Korean’s interests at heart,
especially when four of his appointees had to step down
during nomination hearings due to allegations of ethical
lapses and illegal real estate speculation. Personnel
problems continued in May when Lee’s Blue House Chief of
Social Policy was forced to resign under charges of illegal
land speculation. (NOTE: The current top staff members in
the Blue House have an average net worth of around 4 million
USD. END NOTE.)

——————-
Conservatives Split
——————-

4. (C) Not only has President Lee failed to build public
consensus, but his failure to unite the conservatives
continues to dog his administration. Although Lee won an
unprecedented margin of victory in the December presidential
election (48.7 percent of the vote to 26.3 percent for his
closest rival), he had only eked out his party’s nomination
in the presidential primary. His rival, Park Geun-hye,
retains a great amount of support within the party as well as
enormous popular appeal in the country. Instead of working
with Park to unite the Grand National Party (GNP), Lee and
his top aides worked to exclude politicians loyal to Park

SEOUL 00001204 002 OF 005

from gaining nominations in the April 9 National Assembly
election. Lee was successful in excluding some Park
loyalists, but his direct involvement in the nomination
process and the bitter infighting caused many traditional
conservatives to turn away from Lee. Continued infighting
with Park gave the impression that he was unwilling to work
with those who might oppose his ideas. The GNP only obtained
a slim majority — 153 seats out of 299 — far short of
earlier predictions that projected the GNP winning as many as
200 seats; conservative candidates outside the GNP won an
additional 47 seats, demonstrating that conservative voters,
especially Park Geun-hye supporters, were fed up with the GNP
controlled by President Lee’s faction.

—————-
Election Baggage
—————-

5. (C) Issues held over from the December presidential
election continue to spur public frustration. Most notably,
Lee’s promises to supercharge the economy are increasingly
difficult to realize in a slowing global economy. Lee was
elected on his pledge to grow the economy by seven percent,
but has been forced to dial down his promises because of
larger economic factors at play, such as rising world oil and
food prices and a slowing U.S. economy. Prices for everyday
goods such as ramen noodles (a staple food for working
Koreans and students) have gone up; gasoline is about USD 10
per gallon, angering truckers, commuters and small business
owners; and growth projections are being lowered. The
policies Lee has announced (such as efforts to monitor the
prices of 50 basic goods related to public welfare) have been
criticized as being insufficient, overly interventionist, and
purely political. Additionally, Lee’s efforts to revise
regulations to boost investment by Korea’s chaebol businesses
have done little to assuage public concern that his policies
are targeted toward the elite and ignore the plight of the
middle and lower classes.

6. (C) Lee has yet to succeed in obtaining public buy-in for
any of his policy initiatives. He has announced several new
policies without apparently first consulting experts or the
public, which has resulted in his ideas being derided and
called “half-baked” and “amateur.” The best example of this
is Lee’s effort to reform Korea’s education system –
specifically his efforts to dramatically increase the number
of high school classes taught in English. His failure to
consult with experts before making the announcement resulted
in glaring problems with the initiative, including a dearth
of qualified instructors. Lee also failed to carry out his
campaign promise to set up physical and online sites as
forums for the public to communicate concerns to the
President. He did manage to establish a hotline for top
executives to speak directly to the president, reinforcing
perceptions that Lee has only the elite’s interest at heart.

7. (C) Controversy surrounding Lee’s ambitious cross-country
Grand Canal project resurfaced at the end of May just as the
beef controversy was coming to a head. Despite the fact that
67 percent of the public disapproved of the canal, shortly
after Lee’s inauguration the then minister-designate for Land
and Oceans sparked heated criticism by stating that he would
definitely undertake the project. Lee later suggested that
he would postpone construction and his party even went so far
as to drop it from its platform ahead of the general
election. In late March and again in early May, however,
revelations that the ROKG had no intention of abandoning the
canal project intensified public condemnation that the Lee
Administration refused to listen to the voice of the people.

—————-
Mismanaging Beef
—————-

8. (C) If all these issues led to a sense of dissatisfaction
with Lee’s early performance, the decision to reopen the
market to U.S. beef, and the government’s mishandling of the
issue, proved to be a catalyst that galvanized Korean public
opinion. In thinking about moving forward on beef during the
transition and early days of the new administration, Lee had

SEOUL 00001204 003 OF 005

several key goals: to proceed with an agreement that was
largely in line with what the Roh Administration had quietly
discussed with us, to wait until after the April 9
legislative elections to publicly announce the negotiations;
and to prepare a set of support measures to help the Korean
beef industry (which was expected to be the principal source
of opposition) to adjust. However, not enough was done to
prepare the Korean public for the move from the government’s
historic position (that many questions remained about the
safety of U.S. beef) — not by MOFAT, which saw its role as
negotiating the deal with the USG; not by the Agricultural
Ministry, which continued to hope to the end that the market
would remain closed; and not by the Blue House, which had
further tied its hands by dismantling much of the public and
media outreach operations it inherited from the Roh
Government, in the interest of cost-cutting. To the Korean
public, the dramatic shift in the ROKG’s public posture on
U.S. beef, coming at the end of a tough week-long negotiation
and concluding the night before President Lee was to meet
with President Bush, seemed to demonstrate that the safety
concerns of the Korean public were being tossed aside so Lee
could enjoy an historic summit at Camp David.

9. (C) After the beef deal was announced and released for
public comment, public opposition quickly grew in a way that
reflected some uniquely Korean characteristics.
Misinformation about the safety of U.S. beef, much of it
peddled by activist groups with a broader political agenda,
was disseminated on cell phone text messages (which for many
Korean youths have more credibility than established media,
since they are “independent”). Students played a dominant
role in the early protests, saying that eating U.S. beef
wasn’t a matter of consumer choice (as Lee had early-on
argued) since students would have no choice but to eat the
allegedly BSE-infected U.S. beef that Korean school
cafeterias (and military messes) would serve. As concern
about U.S. beef spread from students to the mainstream
population, the government’s missteps exacerbated the
situation. Agriculture Ministry officials, uncertain about
the text of the beef agreement during a parliamentary
hearing, suggested that their confusion stemmed from not
understanding the English language used during the
negotiation — both incorrect (the negotiations were
conducted with consecutive interpretation) and hardly a way
to build public confidence in the bilateral agreement that
ensued.

10. (C) While the beef issue would probably have benefited
from some benign neglect — at least until Lee’s GNP allies
took control of the National Assembly on May 30 — the Lee
Government instead proceeded with its efforts to force FTA
ratification through the National Assembly in a May lame-duck
session, providing the opposition United Democratic Party
(UDP), in majority at the time, a spectacular platform to
grandstand against the beef deal and insist that it be
renegotiated. Turning water cannons on the protestors
brought back unpleasant memories of past governments, and
enabled the protestors to present themselves as fighters for
Korean democracy.

11. (C) To its credit, the Lee Government has tried to do
the right thing on beef, and has resisted the calls for
renegotiation of the beef deal that have come in from
protestors, the political opposition, and the GNP alike. Lee
and his top advisors continue to believe that once a
temporary solution is found, a line can be drawn under this
crisis, the Korean public can be educated about the safety of
U.S. beef, the market fully reopened, and the KORUS FTA teed
up for ratification. However, the general disarray within
the government, the chaos in the streets, and the fact that
the protestors have made Lee himself the issue, have all made
it difficult for the government to defend its position and
challenge the allegations of the protestors. Instead, the
government has found itself chasing after the moving
goalposts of NGO demands, trying to address each new
allegation as it arises. It is clear the NGO groups in the
“BSE Beef Alliance” (many of whom are also opposed to the
KORUS FTA, and see killing the beef deal as one of their best
ways to sink the FTA in Washington, since it continues to
enjoy majority support in Korea) will not be content until

SEOUL 00001204 004 OF 005

Lee backs down and abrogates the beef deal (and/or formally
requests renegotiation). The Lee Government’s good-faith
efforts to address their concerns have only emboldened these
groups. It is equally clear that while we should try to help
Lee find a temporary solution to this problem — including
agreeing to temporary limitations on export of the most
sensitive beef products, without crossing any red lines — no
matter how the beef situation is resolved, it has
crystallized a critique of Lee’s governance that will weaken
him, and provide a rallying cry for his opponents, for some
time to come.

——————
Lee is Floundering
——————

12. (C) The recent outpouring of disapproval over the beef
issue has become the rallying cry enabling South Koreans to
express their cumulative frustration with the Lee
Administration. The grassroots protests have focused mostly
on a sense that the government was willing to sacrifice the
health of the people in the interest of maintaining strong
ties to the U.S. Protest organizers, mostly progressive
civic groups, organized labor and farm groups, have made
misleading and outright false charges against American beef,
aided by several outrageously slanted documentaries on state
TV networks still dominated by leftist management. Sadly,
many Koreans find these charges credible, because the
credibility of the Lee Administration is so low. Educated
Koreans do know better and reject these allegations as being
unscientific. Still, they are of the view that Lee made a
serious mistake in rushing to open the beef market. What
makes the situation much more inflammable is that this was
American beef and the agreement was reached hours before the
Camp David summit. The perception that President Lee was
kowtowing to Washington is a theme much used by leftists and
nationalists in the protest, but anti-Americanism is not the
principal draw for the mainstream protesters; rather, it’s
anti-Lee.

13. (C) The opposition United Democratic Party (UDP),
struggling to find a mode of popular appeal after resounding
defeats in both the presidential and the National Assembly
elections, has seized on the beef issue in hopes of boosting
its own support base. The UDP has demanded that the ROKG
renegotiate the beef issue before the party will end its
ongoing boycott of the 18th National Assembly. The
opposition has used the beef issue to thrust its members back
into the limelight, criticizing (and misquoting) both the Lee
Administration and the U.S. Government. They have, however,
notably not joined in the protesters’ demands that Lee be
removed from office and have not even floated the idea of
impeachment proceedings. Interestingly, all its bluster has
gotten it nowhere; UDP support ratings still hover around 20
percent.

14. (C) Perhaps even more disturbingly, the ongoing protests
do call into question Koreans’ respect for the rule of law
and their own constitution. Many Koreans view these protests
as a shining exemplar of democracy, rather than as the rule
of the masses that more informed observers are voicing
concerns about. The ability of several thousand protesters
– many of them too young to vote — to bring Korea’s
government to a standstill threatens Korean credibility in
negotiating other international agreements. More serious
still are the long term implications for the governability of
Korea. Koreans — both on the right and the left — are
beginning to express serious concern that the beef hysteria
is dangerously empowering the “mob.” Unless the ROKG manages
to win some control back, many of our interlocutors see a
grim picture of protests becoming the norm in deciding the
nation’s policy.

—————-
Alliance on Hold?
—————-

15. (C) The beef issue will have profound influence on our
bilateral relationship in the coming months. First, Lee
Myung-bak must rebuild domestic trust in his administration

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before he or his staff can even think about making any
progress on ongoing bilateral issues. To rush into any
controversial Alliance agreements, our ROKG interlocutors
believe, is to open the door on the nascent anti-Americanism
that the protests have thus far assiduously avoided. Already
the ROKG has taken care to push all ongoing Alliance issues
to the back burner. In the last two weeks, the ROK side has
postponed some of our bilateral talks — the
regularly-scheduled Strategic Consultations for Allied
Partnership (SCAP), the next round of SMA negotiations, and
talks on the environmental issues relating to the return of
nine USFK camps. SMA and camp returns have long been two of
the most sensitive Alliance issues for the Koreans, as they
require committing ROK budgetary expenditures and have
generated significant criticism for “not standing up to the
U.S.” on previous occasions. Other issues that the Korean
public sees as being on the U.S. “wish list” — such as
continued or expanded ROK participation in Iraq and
Afghanistan as well as involvement in the Proliferation
Security Initiative (PSI) — will also prove more difficult
to make progress on in the short to medium term.

——-
Comment
——-

16. (C) This is a nightmare for Lee Myung-bak. Simply put,
he does not know what to do right now. He knows that to give
in to the protests is to cripple his administration for the
remaining 56 months. Yet, ignoring their demands will only
prolong the agony and make him look even weaker. The course
he has chosen is a little bit of both: bow to the crowd by
apologizing and revising some elements of the beef deal, but
not go all the way to a renegotiation of the agreement that
would likely kill chances for ratification of the FTA in the
U.S. In addition, he will reshuffle the cabinet and his
senior staff. Thereafter, Lee must begin the long process of
regaining his own credibility. Key to this scenario is
getting significant help from the National Assembly, which is
possible only if President Lee accepts the reality that he
must share power with his fellow conservatives, principally
Park Geun-hye.

17. (C) At this time President Lee needs our help to come
out of the immediate crisis. Our first task must be to stop
his political free-fall by agreeing on a beef package that he
can sell to his mainstream domestic critics — satisfying the
extremists is not possible, unless Lee resigns. At the same
time, we should be prepared to defer our sensitive bilateral
issues, such as SMA and camp returns, until the situation has
stabilized. Beyond the immediate terms, we must also support
and vindicate Lee’s original — and courageous — decision on
beef by making a concerted effort to push for KORUS FTA
ratification in the Congress. Our failure to ratify the
KORUS FTA will most definitely further weaken the Lee
presidency. In the longer term, the damage Lee has suffered
from the beef hysteria is such that we might need to reassess
our expectations for the “21st Century Strategic Alliance”
launched at Camp David because, if the Lee Administration
continues on its current course, we will be dealing with a
crippled ally for a long time to come.
VERSHBOW

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