South Korea's new President Moon Jae-In speaks during a press conference at the presidential Blue House on May 10, 2017 in Seoul, South Korea.
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Story highlights

Moon Jae-in has advocated engagement with North Korea

He was involved in the 'Sunshine Policy' of 1998 to 2008

Seoul CNN  — 

Seoul’s policy on North Korea is about to get a major overhaul.

Liberal reformer Moon Jae-in was sworn in Wednesday after winning a snap election to replace impeached President Park Geun-hye.

Moon has advocated dialogue with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, in stark contrast to Park’s approach of tough sanctions and aggressive rhetoric.

Speaking at his swearing in ceremony, Moon promised to “resolve the security crisis as soon as possible.”

“If it is necessary, I will fly immediately to Washington and also visit Beijing and Tokyo,” he said.

“Under the right conditions, I will also go to Pyongyang. For peace on the Korean Peninsula, I will do everything that I can do.”

Moon also vowed to further strengthen the alliance between South Korea and the US.

While he was elected largely on concerns about corruption and the economy, North Korea loomed large after weeks of rising tensions in the region.

Return to sunshine?

A former special forces soldier and human rights lawyer, Moon came in for criticism during the campaign from hardline conservatives who saw him as weak on North Korea.

Sunshine Policy

  • Foreign policy of South Korea from 1998 to 2008
  • Policy of engagement with North Korea on economic and political issues
  • Two South Korean Presidents traveled to Pyongyang
  • Earned South Korean President Kim Dae-jung a Nobel Peace Prize
  • Fewer North Korean nuclear and missile tests during this period
  • Ultimately failed to stop North Korean nuclear program

  • He has called for a combination of negotiations and economic cooperation alongside military and security measures.

    “I am confident to lead the diplomatic efforts involving multiple parties, which will lead to the complete abandonment of the North Korean nuclear program, and bring the relationship between South and North to peace, economic cooperation and mutual prosperity,” Moon said in an April 25 debate.

    His stance has been compared to the so-called “Sunshine Policy” of the liberal governments of 1998 to 2008. By no coincidence, he was a key adviser to those administrations.

    During the Sunshine Policy, Seoul actively engaged Pyongyang, which led to closer relations on both sides of the border and saw two South Korean Presidents visit the North Korean capital. However, the approach ultimately failed to halt North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

    GOYANG, SOUTH KOREA - MAY 04:  Supporters of South Korean presidential candidate Moon Jae-in of the Democratic Party of Korea, cheer during a presidential election campaign on May 4, 2017 in Goyang, South Korea. Preliminary voting has started at local polling stations across South Korea prior to the primary Presidential election on May 9.  (Photo by Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)
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    Weapons testing

    Moon, who takes office Wednesday, is unlikely to get a long honeymoon when it comes to North Korea.

    Experts have been predicting an imminent nuclear test, North Korea’s sixth, for weeks now, as the country ramps up missile testing and saber rattling.

    On Sunday, Pyongyang announced it had detained a US citizen on suspicion of “hostile acts” against the regime, days after it accused Seoul and Washington of plotting to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong Un using “biochemical weapons.”

    During the campaign, Moon advocated for engagement with North Korea – particularly on the economic front – as the best method to work towards a denuclearized Korean Peninsula.

    Such measures have not historically been popular with conservative administrations in the US, however President Donald Trump has vacillated between tough, militaristic talk on the North Korea issue and suggesting he could sit down with Kim himself.

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    Washington ties

    The US and South Korea have a decades-long military and political alliance and Washington is by far Seoul’s most important bilateral partner.

    Facing criticism from the right that his party is anti-American, Moon has played up Trump’s apparent willingness to meet with Kim, saying he is on the “same page” as the US leader.

    However, one area where they firmly not in agreement is over the deployment in South Korea of the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system.

    The caretaker administration which took over after Park’s impeachment accelerated the THAAD roll-out, despite widespread criticism from Moon and others on the left, who have argued its deployment should be contingent on a vote in the country’s National Assembly.

    Last week, Washington and Seoul announced that THAAD was partially up and running, and analysts have warned Moon may be able to do little to prevent its full deployment.

    But analysts warn perceptions that the US ignored South Korean input on its own security issues – compounded when Trump called both Chinese President Xi Jinping and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to discuss North Korea, but the caretaker government in Seoul – have left a key relationship strained before it has even begun.

    Washington was left in a delicate position after Park’s ouster, with several high-ranking administration officials – including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Vice President Mike Pence – visiting Seoul to shore up the alliance amid tensions with North Korea.

    During their visits however, the US officials only met with caretaker President Hwang Kyo-ahn, who had already declared he would not stand to replace Park, and avoided any of her potential successors.

    CNN’s Paula Hancocks, Taehoon Lee, and K.J. Kwon contributed reporting.