The South Korean warship Cheonan was sunk in mysterious circumstances on
26 March 2010. The remarkable events that followed are analysed by Tim
Beal and woven into a larger study of the increasingly volatile
relations between North and South Korea and US concern about the rise of
China.
South Korea's stance towards the North has hardened significantly since
the new conservative government came to power. Beal argues that the
South moved quickly to use the sinking of the Cheonan to put
international pressure on the North, even before the cause of the
sinking had been established. The US followed suit by attempting to
pressurise China into condemning North Korea. The media reports at the
time presented an open and shut case of unprovoked North Korean
aggression, but the evidence points towards the accidental triggering of
a South Korean mine as the cause and South Korean fabrication to
incriminate the North.
With the South bent on forcing the fall of the North's regime with US
help and China unlikely to stand idly by, this book offers an essential
guide to the key factors behind the crisis and possible solutions.