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BackUS Expert: US-South Korea Nuclear Submarine Cooperation Needs Patience, Faces Hurdles
US Expert: US-South Korea Nuclear Submarine Cooperation Needs Patience, Faces Hurdles
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Yonhap News6/26/2026Politics3 min readSouth Korea

US Expert: US-South Korea Nuclear Submarine Cooperation Needs Patience, Faces Hurdles

Quick Look

  • Former US official Eliot Kang highlighted the strategic sense of US-South Korea nuclear submarine cooperation but warned of a lengthy, politically complex process requiring US congressional approval and revisions to existing agreements.
  • He also cautioned against using AUKUS as a benchmark and noted that South Korean calls for nuclear weapons complicate efforts.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

South Korea and the United States are exploring nuclear submarine cooperation, which is seen as strategically beneficial but faces significant political and legislative challenges.

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JEJU, South Korea, June 26 (Yonhap) -- Nuclear submarine cooperation between South Korea and the United States, while making perfect strategic sense, is a lengthy and politically complicated process that needs "patience," a prominent U.S. nonproliferation expert said Friday.

"This cooperation of nuclear submarine is an absolute no-brainer. I think it's right," said Eliot Kang, former U.S. assistant secretary of state for international security and nonproliferation, speaking at a press conference on the sidelines of the Jeju Forum.

While civil nuclear cooperation would strengthen the alliance and deepen energy ties, the path there is strewn with obstacles, he added.

It would require the revision of the existing civil nuclear cooperation agreement, and a separate agreement governing military use of U.S.-supplied nuclear fuel would have to be negotiated, Kang noted.

"We need to have changes to fundamental civil nuclear cooperation," the former U.S. official told the press conference.

Further complicating matters is the need for U.S. congressional approval.

"This is not simply a political will of a particular administration that could say, 'make this thing happen,'" he said.

"It will also depend on the makeup of Congress," Kang added, pointing to the upcoming U.S. midterm elections in November. "We will have a new Congress with a potentially very different political makeup. We need to be very careful."

He cautioned against using AUKUS, a security partnership comprising the U.S., Britain and Australia, as a benchmark for what Seoul might expect from Washington. The two cases, he said, are simply not comparable.

AUKUS, announced in 2021 and signed in 2024, has paved the way for Australia to have its own nuclear-powered submarines using U.S. propulsion technology, enabled by a U.S. exemption allowing the transfer of sensitive nuclear material. The pact is often seen as a possible benchmark for Seoul's future agreement with Washington.

Kang disagreed, saying, "Australia had absolutely no experience in any aspect of civil nuclear technology, industry or human capital. So things were transferred in a way ... that made the proliferation concerns relatively simple."

Kang also warned that public calls in South Korea for the country to develop its own nuclear weapons risk complicating the very cooperation Seoul is pursuing.

"When a lot of the Korean public expressed a view that Korea must have nuclear weapons, it makes things complicated," he said. "The messaging, the negotiation has to be careful, precise and patient."

At its core, he said, the submarine initiative must been seen as reinforcing the bilateral alliance and expanding civil nuclear cooperation, something that benefits both countries strategically and commercially, rather than a threat to U.S. suppliers.

It needs to be viewed, instead, to "enhance the larger relationship," as well as "the health and the strategic position of both of our civil nuclear industry," he said.

Open Questions

  • How will the US Congress respond to potential revisions for nuclear cooperation?
  • Will South Korean public opinion on nuclear weapons shift or impact negotiations?
  • What specific changes to civil nuclear cooperation agreements will be required?

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This article was originally published by Yonhap News.

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