No Easy Exit in Sight From Worst Japan-South Korea Spat in Years
- Moon warns business leaders in Seoul of ‘prolonged’ battle
- Election gives Abe political incentive to drag out fight
July 10: How Will South Korea Respond to Japan's Export Curbs?
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Japan and South Korea plan to meet on Friday over Tokyo’s move to restrict vital exports to its neighbor, but neither has much political incentive to climb down from their worst dispute in decades.
Decades of mistrust make it difficult for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and South Korean President Moon Jae-in to retreat from their budding trade feud. A series of looming deadlines, including a Japanese upper house election on July 21, are only raising the political pressure on both men, who can’t afford to look weak dealing with disagreements rooted in Japan’s 1910-45 occupation of the Korean Peninsula.