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South Korea presidential nominee alarmed by idea of Japan alliance

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The ruling Democratic Party candidate in South KoreaтАЩs upcoming presidential election signaled alarm at Japan on Wednesday, saying he is тАЬof course opposedтАЭ to the idea of a military alliance between the United States, South Korea and Japan.

Citing an ownership dispute with Japan over South Korean-controlled islets in the Sea of Japan, Lee Jae-myung said at a media event, тАЬIs Japan a perfectly friendly state that can be trusted at all times?тАЭ

Lee, who was governor of Gyeonggi Province until last month, has previously expressed his distrust of Japan, which ruled the Korean Peninsula from 1910 until the end of World War II in 1945.

Ties between the two countries have soured considerably in recent years over wartime labor compensation and other issues stemming largely from JapanтАЩs 35-year colonial rule.

The United States has forged defense alliances with South Korea and Japan, its key security partners in East Asia. But there is no alliance between the two neighbors.

Lee said that while sufficient preparations are necessary to deal with North Korea, he thinks a tripartite military alliance involving Washington, Seoul and Tokyo тАЬwould be extremely riskyтАЭ when one looks at Japan taking a тАЬvague stanceтАЭ toward territorial issues and its past тАЬinvasionтАЭ of the peninsula.

In an interview with a local newspaper, Lee said South Korea тАЬneeds to be prepared in the event JapanтАЩs dream of continental expansion erupts militarily.тАЭ

On where South Korea should position itself amid the Sino-U.S. rivalry, the Democratic Party nominee said at WednesdayтАЩs event that South Korea does not need to abandon its тАЬcooperative tiesтАЭ with China even while it strengthens its alliance with the United States.

тАЬProperly balancingтАЭ between the two powers will put South Korea тАЬon the path toward prosperity,тАЭ Lee added.

In the March election, Lee is expected to face the main opposition People Power Party nominee, former Prosecutor General Yoon Suk Yeol. The winner will take over from President Moon Jae In, who ends his single five-year term in May.

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