On November 13, a Korea-US-Japan summit was held at a hotel in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. ⓒ Yonhap News What kind of existence is Japan to Koreans in 2022? To ask this question, we must first look at international relations in 2022. It is very likely that later historians will record this year as a great turning point. Things that pointed to ‘changing the status quo’ continued incessantly. In February, Russia invaded Ukraine. In August, US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan. In October, Chinese President Xi Jinping achieved a third consecutive term. In the US midterm elections in November, Biden’s Democratic Party defended. In Taiwan’s local elections, the ruling party (Democratic Party), which tried to distance itself from China, suffered a crushing defeat. As above, the core axis of the international events that have continued this year are ‘US and China’. So, in order to know which way each event is leading the world, we need to put in the keyword ‘US-China strategic competition’ and examine it. For Koreans living in an environment where they are easily exposed to geopolitical crises, the international situation is an issue related to survival. So, back to the first question. Is Japan, the country right next to us, a friend or a threat to us now? How should Korea get along with Japan in a reality where the two pivots, the United States and China, are becoming stronger and stronger? There is a voice that the two countries should ride the same boat to keep China in check. On the other hand, there are counterarguments that there is a line that cannot be crossed with Japan, which does not apologize for its past history. What kind of country is Japan in the perception of Koreans, and how does it affect Korea-Japan relations? What is the evaluation of the difference in perception by generation and party support and each political circle’s response to Japan? Why should we get along well with Japan, and why? Even so, are there any principles that cannot be undermined, where is the rebellion of public opinion, and so on. Various questions follow. This is why investigated ‘Koreans’ perception of Japan in 2022′. conducted a web survey by designing 248 questions in collaboration with Hankook Research, an institution specializing in public opinion polls. The design and analysis of this web survey were jointly conducted by Hankook Research Research Fellow Jung Han-ul (Ph.D. in Political Science), Deputy Head of Public Opinion Headquarters Lee Dong-han, and Researcher Lee So-yeon. As of the end of November 2022, the United States has the highest emotional temperature among Koreans’ neighboring countries (United States, China, North Korea, and Japan), ranked second in ’emotional temperature’ (see Figure 1). An emotional temperature of 0 is very negative, 50 is neither negative nor positive, and 100 is very positive. America is 62. Next is Japan at 36.2, China at 27.3 and North Korea at 24.3. Compared to the United States, Japan, China, and North Korea are figures that can be called ‘battles in the lower leagues’. However, when comparing time series, quite noticeable changes are detected. In the second half of 2018, the emotional temperature for North Korea recorded 48.7, the highest in the last four years. The trend at the time that led to the series of inter-Korean summits promoted by the Moon Jae-in administration and the North Korea-US summit was reflected. Until the second half of 2020, the emotional temperature toward Japan was the lowest among the four countries (US, China, North Korea, and Japan). In response to the South Korean Supreme Court’s ruling on compensation for victims of forced labor under Japanese colonial rule, Japan took ‘trade retaliation’ by regulating exports of semiconductor-related materials. Then, Korean citizens launched a ‘No Japan (boycott of Japanese products)’ movement. It’s from 2019. At that time, the emotional temperature for Japan was 21. It was the lowest in the past four years. Since then, it has been on an upward trend. Does this mean that we have entered a mood of reconciliation with Japan? In order to confirm this, I asked for a more specific perception of Japan with several contrasting images.
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