Letting go of unification
By Kyung Moon HwangThis will seem odd, but last Friday's extraordinary summit in Panmunjeom, which produced a formal “Declaration for Peace, Prosperity, and Unification of the Korean Peninsula,” showed that unification is actually not a goal, nor perhaps should it be. Unification, considered a moral imperative by Koreans on both sides for generations, remains a pipe dream. We tend to forget that it has been 110 years since Koreans governed themselves as a unified country. This is longer than even the near-century of Mongol domination back in the 13th and 14th centuries. Hence the “norm” of an autonomous, unified Korea is hard to fathom, in spite of the sentiments accompanying all the political theater at the summit.Rather, according to the formal proclamations from the Panmunjeom summit, the more urgent and meaningful goal would be to realize a peace regime on the peninsula by dropping the hostilities and raising North Korea's economic conditions. Meanwhile, the obligatory calls for unification would remain ceremonial and general, even abstract.This downplayin