Raphael Rashid Profile picture
Sep 8 19 tweets 5 min read Read on X
1/ S. Korea's entire media establishment across political spectrum has united in unprecedented editorial consensus expressing profound betrayal, outrage, national humiliation, and fundamental breach of US-ROK alliance re: mass arrest of Korean workers at Hyundai's Georgia plant.
2/ The general sentiment: while Korean media occasionally unite on domestic issues, these are usually severely politicised. Here, the level of scorn spanning from conservative establishment to progressive outlets is extraordinarily rare. They are furious.
3/ Chosun Ilbo (flagship conservative): Scathing language calling this a "merciless arrest operation" that represents something "that cannot happen between allies" and a "breach of trust." Notes Trump personally thanked Hyundai's chairman just months ago. chosun.com/opinion/editor…
4/ Chosun calls the situation "bewildering" and emphasises the contradiction: Trump pressures Korean companies to invest while simultaneously arresting their workers. The editorial questions whether American investment promises survive across different administrations.
5/ Dong-A Ilbo (conservative): Delivers perhaps the most damning question in its headline: "How are we supposed to build factories?" while noting Korea was "specifically targeted" and describing this as "shocking" behaviour between allies. donga.com/news/Opinion/a…
6/ Dong-A asks "who would invest" under these conditions when Korean workers are treated like a "criminal group." Notes this threatens 17,000+ jobs already created by Korean companies in Georgia. "The Korean government must demand a pledge from the US to prevent recurrence."
7/ JoongAng Ilbo (conservative): Calls this an incident that "shook the values and trust of the ROK-US alliance" occurring at the very "site of economic alliance." Describes public being "appalled" at seeing Koreans dragged away in chains and cable ties. joongang.co.kr/article/253650…
8/ JoongAng characterises this as a "show-off style crackdown targeting an allied nation" and "an act that undermines the credibility of the alliance." Suggests this may have been Trump's political theatre ahead of midterm elections.
9/ Korea Economic Daily (business): Headlines this as an "absurd arrest of Koreans" incident. "It is hard to understand in terms of common sense why quotas for visas are given to Australia, Singapore and Chile, but not a single visa to Korea." hankyung.com/article/202509…
10/ KED notes that "this incident is a significant blow to the ROK-US economic alliance," warning that if this is used as "leverage" in trade negotiations, "it would be a behaviour of betraying the trust of the alliance."
11/ Maeil Business Newspaper: Uses headline: "When they told us to build factories, that was one thing... US arrests 300 Korean workers." Calls situation "shocking" and "absurd", notes you cannot supervise trillion-won investments without Korean personnel. mk.co.kr/news/editorial…
12/ Maeil states that it's "ridiculous that they would go after a company that has made a deliberate decision to invest in the US," ending with a simple but blunt message: "an alliance requires courtesy."
13/ Seoul Economic Daily (business): Calls this "shocking". "Our citizens' rights must never be violated again," describes the arrest footage as "horrifying". Uses particularly strong language, that the Korean workers were treated like "prisoners of war." sedaily.com/NewsView/2GXTL…
14/ "While we do not understand the political motivations of the far-right Republicans in the US in this reckless crackdown, it is also painful to see how our diplomacy failed to recognise a massive operation that had been planned for months."
15/ Hankook Ilbo (centrist-conservative): Korean companies "ended up looking like they got hit from behind," warns this threatens "trust between allies" and calls for fundamental visa system reform. hankookilbo.com/News/Read/A202…
16/ Kyunghyang Shinmun (liberal): Calls this "what kind of bolt from the blue incident is this?" and "deeply regrettable" while criticising "treating them like criminals." Questions whether rational businesses would invest in a country behaving this way. khan.co.kr/article/202509…
17/ Hankyoreh (progressive): Most direct in questioning alliance fundamentals with headline "Is this what you do to an ally?". Describes Koreans feeling "backstabbed" after the Lee-Trump meeting at the White House and accuses US of "duplicitous behaviour." hani.co.kr/arti/opinion/e…
18/ My 2 cents: In Korea, public humiliation isn't just personal embarrassment, it's an attack on dignity that reverberates through society. The fact that the workers were filmed being shackled and footage was deliberately released by ICE makes it worse.
19/ Korea has deep historical memory of being humiliated by foreign powers and the visuals of Koreans in chains being paraded by a foreign power triggers collective memories of subjugation that go beyond this just being "unfair".

This is public humiliation of the nation itself.

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More from @koryodynasty

Sep 9
1/ UPDATE regarding Google's Korean map saga: Google announced today it will remove latitude/longitude coordinates for ALL *South Korean* locations from Google Maps globally IF granted mapping data permission from the Korean gov. Not just sensitive sites but the entire territory. Image
2/ This goes far beyond Google's previous offer to blur sensitive facilities. The transport ministry has confirmed to me that they did indeed make this request for "national security" reasons but did not elaborate on the specifics. theguardian.com/world/2025/aug…
3/ It remains unclear what this will mean in the long run for users. While right-clicking and displaying coordinates is not a core functionality for most, it could possibly complicate third-party app dev, OSINT, etc.

Would be curious to hear from others what this would mean!
Read 5 tweets
Sep 6
1/ Something that's not being reported much re: ICE crackdown at Hyundai-LG Georgia battery factory: Korean companies investing billions cannot get proper visas, are then criminalised for bringing skilled workers to fill gaps American labour cannot.

Sentiment is one of betrayal.
2/ The language in local media is visceral.

Chosun Ilbo: "Built tens of trillions [KRW] factories for America... to then get slapped as illegal immigrants."

News1: "Told us to invest, then treated us as illegal immigrants." This isn't about law, it's about perceived duplicity. Image
Image
3/ One of the core issues is that S. Korea has no country-reserved work visa. By contrast, Australia for instance gets E-3 (10,500/year) and Singapore/Chile get H-1B1 (5,400/1,400). Korea has neither, despite FTA status and massive investment commitments. koreatimes.co.kr/business/compa…
Read 19 tweets
Sep 5
US authorities have reportedly detained 450 workers at Hyundai-LG battery plant construction site in Georgia yesterday, including over 30 South Koreans said to have legitimate visas. Seoul has expressed concern and says Korean nationals' rights "must not be unjustly violated." Image
The detained South Koreans at the Ellabell facility are said to be on B1 business visas or ESTA waivers for meetings and contracts. Foreign Ministry has dispatched consuls to the scene and "conveyed concerns and regrets" to the US embassy in Seoul. en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN202509…
Both Hyundai and LG Energy Solution are said to be "actively cooperating with authorities" to secure staff release. The raid raises concerns about potential disruptions to other major Korean projects including Hyundai's planned Louisiana steel mill and Georgia EV expansion.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 4
1/ A South Korean parliamentary committee has passed expanded special prosecutor laws that would mandate live TV broadcasts of ex-president Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law trial, citing "public interest" in seeing proceedings for "grave state crimes". yna.co.kr/view/AKR202509…
2/ The laws target three major issues/ongoing investigations: Yoon's December martial law attempt (insurrection), corruption allegations against his wife Kim Keon Hee, and the controversial death of a marine during flood rescue operations.
3/ Under the new provisions, Yoon's insurrection trial would be broadcast live and mandatory for first-instance proceedings. The other two cases could be broadcast if requested. Exception: broadcasts can be paused if both Yoon and prosecutors agree. news1.kr/politics/assem…
Read 10 tweets
Aug 8
1/ Google Maps doesn't function properly in South Korea. You can see restaurants and landmarks, but can't get walking or driving directions. Authorities have for 18 years refused Google's requests to export detailed mapping data.

That could all change next week.

Full details: Image
2/ South Korea is one of only 3 places globally where Google Maps doesn't work properly - alongside China and North Korea. It's a grievance that many foreign tourists face when coming to the country.

My article in the Guardian: theguardian.com/world/2025/aug…
3/ The technical issue: Google wants access to 1:5000 scale mapping data (where 1cm = 50m) to export to its global servers. This, they say, would enable turn-by-turn navigation. Currently, Google actually already has access access to this through licencing from SK's Tmap. Image
Read 23 tweets
Jun 9
1/ South Korea's new President Lee Jae-myung is reportedly considering appointing his own criminal defence lawyer as a Constitutional Court justice whilst facing a constitutional question over whether his ongoing trials can even continue. koreatimes.co.kr/southkorea/202…
2/ Lee Jae-myung faces five ongoing criminal cases including election law violations, perjury, and alleged illegal payments to North Korea. But there's a big constitutional question mark over whether these trials can proceed at all.
3/ The lawyer in question, Lee Seung-yeop, has defended the president in several of these major cases. He's a former judge turned lawyer who represented Lee Jae-myung in his election law case, perjury charges, and North Korea payment allegations. chosun.com/opinion/editor…
Read 14 tweets

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