CSIS Survey: Korean and Japanese Elites Oppose Nuclear Weapons Acquisition
نظرة سريعة
- A CSIS survey reveals that 75% of South Korean and nearly 80% of Japanese strategic elites oppose or are uncertain about their countries acquiring nuclear weapons.
- Experts suggest such a move could destabilize Northeast Asia more than US troop reductions.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
A survey by CSIS experts explored the views of strategic elites in South Korea and Japan regarding nuclear weapons acquisition.
The impact of such a move could potentially exceed that of a reduction in United States troop deployments in the region, thereby affecting nuclear stability in northeast Asia, CSIS experts said in an event to publish the survey on Thursday.
The survey was led by Victor Cha, president of the geopolitics and foreign policy department and Korea chair at CSIS, and Kristi Govella, CSIS senior adviser and Japan chair.
Respondents of the survey, which ended at the end of October, included current and former government officials, parliamentarians, academics, think tank experts and corporate executives.
According to the survey, 75 per cent of South Korean strategic elites and nearly 80 per cent of Japanese strategic elites expressed opposition to or uncertainty regarding their respective countries acquiring nuclear weapons.
أسئلة مفتوحة
- What are the specific concerns of the 20-25% of South Koreans and 20% of Japanese elites who expressed uncertainty or support?
- What are the potential geopolitical consequences beyond nuclear stability?



